PrepTest 119
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Humanities
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- BG on Obasan; Author’s view
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- BG - Japanese-Canadian family during WWII; daughter’s perspective as family disintegrates
- Author - Obasan uses form to convey the protagonist’s heroism and symbolism to critique the majority culture (main point)
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Form/protagonist’s heroism
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Analogy - 3 stages like anthropological rite of passage
- List - Stages, and comparison to three-stage book structure
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Symbolism/critique of majority culture (and wrap-up)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Christian symbols to question ethics of majority culture
- Example - Stone into bread; facts of majority culture’s abuse and bread of durability of her people
Main Point: Joy Kogawa uses form and symbolism in Obasan, the former to convey the heroism of the major character and the latter to critique the majority culture.
Key Lines?Lines 8-12 - The Author presents his viewpoint and the main topics of the passage (form/heroism; symbols/critique)
Lines 13-15 - The first main topic is fleshed out
Lines 41-44 - The second main topic is introduced
Line 44 - An example of the second main topic is introduced
Lines 53-58 - The Author’s main point is reiterated
Meta-Structure?Importance of Work - While many Humanities passages focus on a work’s innovative nature, some focus solely on the elements of the work that make it worthwhile or important, even if they’re not innovative. That’s the case here. The Author never refers to Kogawa’s Obasan as innovative, but he does present the important elements of the work that allow it to emphasize its main themes - the major character’s heroism and her critique of the majority culture (Lines 8-10). He connects each of these themes to a different element of her writing - the novel’s form for the former, and the novel’s symbolism for the latter. Paragraph 2 is dedicated to discussing the connection between form and the main character’s heroism, while Paragraph 3 discusses how the novel’s symbols support the critique of the majority culture. Finally, the passage ends with a summary of this view. When a passage falls into this Meta-Structure, the main point is a summary of the Author’s view on what makes the work important or worth studying, reflected in our summary above.
List - Paragraph 2 features two lists. The first establishes the elements of a rite of passage, as defined by anthropologists. The second lists the sections of Obasan to show that they line up with those elements of the rite of passage. This is all in service of supporting the paragraph’s thesis - that Obasan’s form supports the major character’s heroism.
Example - Paragraph 3 features an example of symbolism that Kogawa uses to critique the majority culture, reinforcing the main point of the paragraph (and half of the passage’s overall main point).
Last Thoughts?The main point is stated at the end of Paragraph 1 and restated at the end of the passage. The main point previews the structure of the rest of the passage. Each paragraph starts with its thesis and then uses a structural element (list; example, respectively) to support that thesis. Thus, the passage is pretty straightforward overall, and we should focus on getting through the questions as quickly as possible to save time for a passage that is more difficult - there’s definitely one in the future of this section!
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: B
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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Aalienation, dislocation, integration
Why choice A is not credited
(A) Alienation is second on the list, not first. Dislocation isn’t mentioned, but it’s closest to separation, which is first, not second. And the third step is reintegration, not integration.
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Bseparation, alienation, reintegration
Why choice B matches the stem
(B) (Line 16; Line 18; Line 20) This answer matches up with the sequence of steps in a rite of passage as listed at the beginning of Paragraph 2, so it’s the correct answer.
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Cintegration, alienation, disintegration
Why choice C is not credited
(C) Reintegration is the third step, and neither integration or disintegration are steps. Alienation is also first, not second.
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Ddislocation, reconciliation, reintegration
Why choice D is not credited
(D) Reconciliation is closest to reintegration, but that’s also listed as a step in the sequence here. Dislocation isn’t exactly separation, though if you waited until the second element to eliminate this answer, we certainly understand why!
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Edisintegration, transformation, reintegration
Why choice E is not credited
(E) Disintegration is stronger than separation, and no step is listed as transformation. This answer is interesting in that it seems to line up, generally, with the steps in a rite of passage and certainly with how a test taker might perceive a heroic journey, but it doesn’t line up with how the steps in the sequence are described in the passage.
What this tests
Discussion
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