Reading comp PrepTest 123 · Section 1 · Question 13

Passage

Questions 7-13  .        Countee Cullen (Countee Leroy Porter,  . 1903–1946) was one of the foremost poets of the  . Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Humanities


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Background on Cullen and his work/influences; Cullen’s view
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Definition of “Harlem Renaissance”:
      • Movement of African American writers, musicians, and artists in the 1920s
    • Cullen’s view:
      • Wanted his poetry to be romantic and universal, beautifully expressed
      • Focused on European forms; lots of Christian imagery
    • Examples of European forms in Cullen’s work:
      • Sonnets, quatrains, couplets, and conventional rhyme
    • Cause-and-effect relationship, according to the author:
      • Cullen’s classical allusions and Christian imagery were probably caused by his university education, Methodist upbringing
    • Author’s attitude: “were mostly likely” (Line 15)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Critics (both sides); Cullen’s response
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Pro-Cullen critics’ view:
      • Cullen was skillful within European verse
    • Example of Cullen’s skill, according to pro-Cullen critics:
      • “The Ballad of the Brown Girl” used artfully captured the atmosophere of century-old English ballads
    • Anti-Cullen critics’ view:
      • The European form not right for racial issues, and Cullen switched between aesthete and racial issues
    • Example of poems that aren’t fit for exploration of racial issues, according to Anti-Cullen critics:
      • “Uncle Jim” and “Incident”
    • Comparisons, according to Cullen:
      • Interest in romantic poetry compatible with racial issues
      • Distinction between solely political poetry and his work, which reflected his idetnity as an African American

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Author on Cullen’s development later on
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Comparisons in Cullen’s work:
      • Fewer references to racial issues and more on religion in later work
      • But didn’t abandon racial issues
    • Examples of increased religion in Cullen’s later work:
      • “The Black Christ” and “Heritage,” which focused on broader issues of suffering/redemption
    • Author’s attitude: “Nonetheless” (Line 54)

Main Point: Critics were split on Cullen’s use of European verse to explore racial issues, but Cullen viewed the combination of the two as reflecting his identity, and while he focused more on religious themes in his later writing, Cullen never abandoned a focus on racial issues.

Key Lines?

Lines 6-10 - Cullen’s view on his poetry

Lines 10-11 - Cullen’s style

Lines 18-19 - Pro-Cullen critics

Lines 23-25 - Anti-Cullen critics

Lines 33-36 - Cullen’s response to criticism

Lines 42-44 - The author’s overall view of his later work

Lines 54-58 - The author’s opinion on this later work

Meta-Structure?

Rebutting Critics: One of the more common Meta-Structures in Humanities passages is where the author defends a certain artist from criticism. Here, the author starts with a description of Cullen’s poetry and influences (Paragraph 1) before exploring criticism of that poetry (Lines 18-33). The author then discusses Cullen’s defense against the negative criticism (Lines 33-41), though the author doesn’t take an explicit side in that debate. Then, the author discusses Cullen’s later work (Lines 42-54). It’s not until the end that we get the author’s opinion on the criticism and Cullen’s response to it — that Cullen remained committed to the importance of racial issues (Lines 54-58). While this opinion doesn’t directly undermine the criticism that European poetic forms weren’t a great fit for discussing racial issues, this is the author’s opinion, and so it constitutes the main point in this passage. As we wrote it out above, we included all of the myriad viewpoints, but the author’s opinion at the end of the passage is the only element that needs to show up in a Main Point question’s correct answer.

Examples: In Paragraphs 2 and 3, the author presents examples of poems that back up various opinions on Cullen’s work. Line 20 introduces an example of a poem praised by some critics, while Line 25 and Line 28 introduce examples cited by the critics who brought up issues with Cullen’s work. The author uses two examples in Paragraph 3 to back up the contention that Cullen increasingly focused on the religious dimension of his poetry in his later work, though it still showed the importance of racial issues. While none of these examples is very extended, they do show up so frequently that we should expect them to be referenced in a few questions.

Last Thoughts?

As we noted in our discussion of the Meta-Structure, the author’s failure to take a stance that directly contradicts the criticism leveled against Cullen is a subtlety in this passage that will likely be reflected in answers. The author limited their opinion to that last paragraph, which wasn’t about how Cullen’s style and content meshed, but rather about his commitment to discussing racial issues in his poetry. Let’s keep that in mind for any question addressing the author’s viewpoint.

Question prompt

Which one of the Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: E

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Humanities

Strategy Overview

Review the big-picture notes we left for each paragraph, then find an answer reflecting that organization

Answer Anticipation

For these questions, we should be pretty well set up based on how we tagged each paragraph - we should be noting the overall purpose of each paragraph after we read them.Paragraph 1: Intro Cullen and his work/influences; Cullen’s viewParagraph 2: Critics (both sides); Cullen’s responseParagraph 3: Author on Cullen’s development later on We shouldn’t have to do much more than review these notes, then head straight to the answers and find one that generally aligns with them.

Answer choices

  1. A
    Biographical information about Cullen Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) Does this answer choice match our big-picture notes for each paragraph?

    No. This answer goes wrong in the second clause. Cullen’s development isn’t really traced through poems. A few poems are used to highlight criticism of his work, and a few more are focused on his later work, but the poems aren’t used to trace his development through his career.

  2. B
    Biographical information about Cullen Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) Does this answer choice match our big-picture notes for each paragraph?

    This answer is pretty close, but it loses it at the end. The author does discuss his background in Paragraph 1. And Paragraph 2 does discuss criticism of his use of European verse — both positive and negative. However, the author doesn’t evaluate the success of this use or take sides in the debate. Rather, the author discusses whether Cullen continued to commit to the importance of racial issues in his later work that had a more religious dimension — not whether he was successful in discussing those issues.

  3. C
    Biographical information about Cullen Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) Does this answer choice match our big-picture notes for each paragraph?

    This answer does a great job of outlining Paragraph 1, but it doesn’t sum up Paragraphs 2 and 3, so it falls short.

  4. D
    Cullen's approach to poetry Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) Does this answer choice match our big-picture notes for each paragraph?

     This answer fails in its second part, as there’s no indication that the cited works are his “most notable.”

  5. E
    Cullen's approach to poetry Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E matches the stem

    (E) Does this answer choice match our big-picture notes for each paragraph?

     This answer addresses the major points as they show up in each paragraph. Paragraph 1 focuses on Cullen’s background — specifically, his view on poetry and his influences, which constitute his approach to poetry. Paragraph 2 highlighted criticism of Cullen’s work — whether he was successful as a poet. And Paragraph 3 discusses Cullen’s shift from explicit references to racial matters to a focus on religious dimensions. Since this answer sums up the role of each paragraph in order, it’s the correct answer here.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 8%
  2. B 5%
  3. C 7%
  4. D 3%
  5. E Credited 77%

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Discussion

  • Why not A 1 reply

    Started by hfatima1