Reading comp PrepTest 126 · Section 2 · Question 16

Passage

Questions 14-21  .        With their recognition of Maxine Hong Kingston  . as a major literary figure, some critics have Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Humanities


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Critics' view on Kingston (uninfluenced by Chinese literature) and the author's rebuttal (overlook her connection to "talk-story")
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Critics's view:
      • Maxine Hong Kingston's works are truly innovative, with no precedent in Chinese literature (first sentence)
    • Author's view:
      • The critics just look at written works and thus overlook her work's connection to the Chinese tradition of "talk-story" (last sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "overlooked" (last sentence); "highly developed" (last sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Background of talk-story (old, maintained by families, immigrants embraced Western subjects/discourse)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Comparison, according to the author:
      • Chinese immigrants in the U.S. adapted the talk-story, including new subject matter and forms of Western discourse (last sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "continually revitalized" (second sentence); "fully established, sophisticated oral culture, already ancient and capable of producing masterpieces" (third sentence)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Kingston's views (oral storyteller, uses "thematic" memory, stories grow and change beyond print)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Kingston's views:
      • Sees herself as part of a long lineage of oral storytellers working in the talk-story tradition; her stories can change and grow even if a moment of their development is captured in written text (first and last sentence)
    • Comparison, according to Kingston:
      • Draws a distinction between "thematic" memory (picks and rearranges the most important parts of remembered stories) and "print-oriented" memory (emphasizes the precise order of events) (second sentence)

Paragraph 4

  • Paragraph note
    • Example of Kingston's use of the talk-story tradition (China Men, which uses elements of that tradition and imbues English with Chinese)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Example of Kingston's use of the talk-story tradition, according to the author:
      • China Men, which uses elements that are common to the talk-story genre and oral tradition and takes idiomatic English and gives it Chinese language characteristics (first through last sentences)
    • List of oral culture/talk-story elements in China Men:
      • A "grammar" of repetitive themes, stock characters, symmetry/balanced oppositions; repetition (first sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "evidence" (first sentence); "typical of that genre and common to most oral cultures" (first sentence); "succeeds" (last sentence); "allusive texture" (last sentence); "rich in aural and visual puns" (last sentence)

Main Point: While critics believe that Kingston's works were produced outside of the Chinese literary tradition, her works are produced within the Chinese talk-story tradition.

Meta-Structure?

Correcting the Record: This passage utilizes a Correcting the Record Meta-Structure.* In a Correcting the Record passage, the author will describe at least one common misconception or false belief. The author will then explain why the beliefs are false and occasionally offer an alternative belief.

This passage certainly fits that mold. The passage opens with some critics claiming that Kingston was a completely innovative artist, producing her works "ex nihilo" (literally meaning "from nothing," but the contextual definition of "lack[ing] ... direct literary antecedents" will help you deduce its meaning in this context). The author then corrects that view, showing how Kingston's work belongs to the "long Chinese tradition of a highly developed genre of song and spoken narrative known as 'talk-story'" (P1, S2). The author spends the rest of the passage providing background info on that tradition, relaying Kingston's statements on her place within that tradition, and showing how one of Kingston's works exemplifies her connection to the genre.


In a Correcting the Record passage, the main point is often the author's explanation of why the misconception is false (or just an assertion that the misconceptions are false). Alternatively, if the author provides an alternative belief or approach, the main point is the author's opinion about that belief or approach. The latter description applies to this passage because the author argues that Kingston's works are connected to the talk-story tradition. The author summarizes their opinion on this alternative approach at the end of the first paragraph, so we use that to help us understand and articulate the passage's main point. We can also frame that sentiment as a response to critics, which we did in our summary of the main point.

*As is the case with many passages that fall under the Critical Meta-Structure umbrella, we could use a few different Meta-Structures from that family to describe this passage. We could certainly call this a Rebutting Critics or Criticizing a Viewpoint passage and come away with a solid understanding of the passage's organization and main point.

Example: An entire paragraph is dedicated to an example of how Kingston's writing style/form relates to the talk-story tradition. That makes the example the most prominent minor Meta-Structure. Let's expect at least one question — most likely a Minor Point or Argument Structure question — about the China Men example.

Last Thoughts?

We're going to rely heavily on the purpose of each paragraph to help us find information, as each one has a clear purpose and topic distinct from the others. Focusing on the role of each paragraph when they are this distinct in their purpose is a great way to tackle questions efficiently!

Question prompt

It can be inferred Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: C

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

Question Type

Humanities

Strategy Overview

Review the purpose of the paragraph in which the expression is found, including the expression in question, then use the purpose and the immediate context to define the expression's meaning

Answer Anticipation

This question asks what the author meant when they used the phrase "personally remembered stories." This phrase appeared in the third paragraph, so we should start by defining the role of that paragraph, as that can sometimes provide contextual clues about the author's meaning. Our note for the third paragraph is, "Kingston's views (oral storyteller, uses "thematic" memory, stories grow and change beyond print)." So, the phrase "personally remembered stories" almost certainly refers to Kingston's use of her "'thematic' memory" and how that contributes to her connection to the talk-story tradition. Let's review the relevant line to see if we're correct about that hunch.Turning our attention to the line in question, we'll see that Kingston describes her storytelling processes to distinguish them from others. Those "storytelling memory" processes "sift and reconstruct the essential elements of personally remembered stories" (P3, S2). This is a lot to unpack!Let's start at the beginning. The processes she refers to are "storytelling memory processes," so they have to do with recalling and retelling a story. And, specifically, she says that they involve sifting and reconstructing the essential elements of stories that a person remembers. So, Kingston tells stories by remembering the important details and constructing a story around those details. So, the story Kingston tells may not unfold in the way the events actually happened or how the story was previously told by another person. Further, she may not tell the same story the same way every time. The broad strokes and essential elements will be the same, but the details might differ based on her unique memory and what she chooses to focus on. So, "personally remembered stories" refer to the unique and sometimes unreliable memory Kingston uses when retelling stories.This is all distinguished from the processes of a print-oriented culture, which focuses on the "retention of precise sequences of words" (P3, S2). In other words, Kingston's processes involve remembering a story's broad strokes and retelling it in her way, instead of memorizing the actual words to the story. Focusing on this other style can help us eliminate answers that line up with it.We have a pretty good idea of what "personally remembered stories" refer to now, so let's head to the answers!

Answer choices

  1. A
    a literary genre of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) Does this say that "personally remembered stories" refer to the unique and sometimes unreliable memory Kingston uses when retelling stories?

    Nope. This is not what the author means when they used the phrase "personally remembered stories." The author uses the phrase "personally remembered stories" to explain how Kingston constructs her talk-stories, which is its own genre. The phrase refers to Kingston's memory, not an entirely different genre of stories.

  2. B
    a thematically organized personal Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) Does this say that "personally remembered stories" refer to the unique and sometimes unreliable memory Kingston uses when retelling stories?

    Not quite. This answer is tempting because it seems to line up with the literal words used on the page, but it misses some key points. Namely, this answer choice specifies that Kingston's stories are a personal narrative of her past. The passage doesn't support that assertion. Kingston could use her "thematic" storytelling memory when telling stories about her life, but she could also use this technique when telling stories she heard from others (like ancient fables or myths, for example). The passage doesn't specify which type of story she uses her "thematic" storytelling memory for. Therefore, this answer choice is wrong.

  3. C
    partially idiosyncratic memories of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C matches the stem

    (C) Does this say that "personally remembered stories" refer to the unique and sometimes unreliable memory Kingston uses when retelling stories?

    Yes! "[P]artially idiosyncratic" matches up with our deduction that Kingston's "thematic" storytelling memory is unique and sometimes unreliable. This also says that she uses this "thematic" storytelling memory when remembering and retelling "narratives." (Compare this to (B), which specifies that she only uses this memory when telling "personal narratives of [her] own past.") After all, we learn that Kingston sifts through her "thematic" storytelling memory to fashion the essential elements of a narrative into a new telling of it. That sifting and refashioning makes the narratives idiosyncratic. So, this is the correct answer.

  4. D
    the retention in memory Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) Does this say that "personally remembered stories" refer to the unique and sometimes unreliable memory Kingston uses when retelling stories?

    Nope. Kingston's style consists of an approach to personally remembered stories, which she distinguishes from the retention of precise sequences of words (P3, S2). This answer refers to the other style, not the one that the "personally remembered stories" are attached to.

  5. E
    easily identifiable thematic issues Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) Does this say that "personally remembered stories" refer to the unique and sometimes unreliable memory Kingston uses when retelling stories?

    No. This answer doesn't even make sense. The relevant line refers to Kingston's memory of stories — particularly stories from the oral tradition of the talk-story (P3, S3). So, her "personally remembered stories" definitely don't refer to "issues" from literature.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 14%
  2. B 34%
  3. C Credited 41%
  4. D 10%
  5. E 1%

Deeper help

Ask follow-ups on any step

Optional AI tutor mode will let you interrogate assumptions, compare answers, and drill weak patterns without leaving the page.

Human-written explanations stay primary; AI is an add-on when you want it.

Discussion