PrepTest 129

[lcid:3615] Prep Test 129 LSAT — Reading Comp — S4 Reading comp

Passage

Questions 13-19 The following passages are adapted from critical essays on the American writer Willa Cather (1873–1947). Passage A  . Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Humanities


Passage A

Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Cather’s influences; Style of one of them
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
    • Cather’s influences - Tolstoy + Turgenev
    • Wilson - Cather followed Turgenev
    • Turgenev - Understand motivations and habits of characters but only show typical actions

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Cather + Turgenev style
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
    • Impressionistic (secret knowledge/”thing not named”)
    • Cather - Inferences are created
    • Both - Selection, simplification - Establish mood

Passage B

Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Cather vs Critics; Distinction (Novel vs. Narrative)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
    • Cather - Writes narratives, not fiction/novels
    • French theorists - Narratology - Broadened and simplified view of fiction
    • Dominant Western approach - Realistic Novel - Direct psychology, linear time, causality, logical closure
    • Narratology better for Cather’s work

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Views of Critics; Author’s characterization
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, points of intersection, and the author's attitude
    • Critics (Zabel/Edel) - No structure/substance; inconclusive
    • Author - “Failures” are central features; impressionistic; non-novelistic

Main Points:

Passage A - Turgenev’s focus on indirect and impressionistic writing anticipated Cather’s, and they both wrote in a way that focused on establishing a prevailing mood.

Passage B - Critics misunderstood Cather’s work when attempting to view it as a Western “realistic novel,” when her works are better viewed as impressionistic narratives.

Key Lines?

Passage A:

  • Lines 2-3 - Cather cites her influences
  • Lines 4-8 - Critic brings up similarity between Cather and key influence
  • Lines 18-19 - Author relates influence to Cather
  • Lines 23-27 - Author brings up similarities
  • Lines 27-29 - Author brings up central similarity

Passage B:

  • Lines 31-33 - Cather’s view on her work, which reflects Author’s
  • Lines 39-44 - Comparison of old and new view of fiction
  • Lines 45-47 - Author says which is better for Cather
  • Lines 54-59 - Author states positive view of elements Critics dislike

Meta-Structure? Relationship Between Passages?

The two passages both discuss aspects of Cather’s work, and they both have a fairly positive view of aspects of it. There are differences in what they specifically discuss and the elements of their arguments, but they both generally agree that Cather used impressionistic techniques (Line 18; Line 56) to create a prevailing mood in a way that didn’t necessarily match with other writing at the time.

Author’s Influences (Passage A) - Many Humanities passages focus on the influences for a certain artist or movement. Passage A brings up Tolstoy and Turgenev, and it explores the similarities between the latter’s writing and Cather’s that shows his “impressionistic aesthetic” was a precursor to Cather’s (Lines 18-19).

Similarities (Passage A) - The Author of Passage A brings up many similarities between Cather and Turgenev in his exploration of how the latter influenced the former.

Old Approach/New Approach (Passage B) - Passage B discusses two critical “lenses” that can be used to analyze works of fiction. The “dominant” approach - the “modern Western form” - focused on linear, logical, causal novels that had direct psychological characterization (Lines 42-44). The new approach - “narratology” - broadened and simplified how we viewed fiction, saying that it only needed to tell a story (Lines 36-40). The Author then says that the new approach - narratology - is better for viewing Cather’s work (Lines 45-47). When a passage focuses on an old and a new approach, and the Author sides with one of them, that’s almost always reflected in the main point.

Defending an Artist from Critics (Passage B) - The Author of Passage B brings up critics who weren’t fans of Cather’s work (Lines 48-54) in order to defend her from those critics (Lines 54-62). This Meta-Structure is directly related to the Old Approach/New Approach Meta-Structure, as the Author defends Cather by arguing the Critics use the old approach, while the new approach is better suited to her writing. This Meta-Structure should similarly be reflected in the main point.

Example/Generalization (Passage B) - While not explored in depth at all, Passage B does bring up the example of Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop, so we should be aware that a question will likely ask about it.

Last Thoughts?

Together, these passages characterize and describe Cather’s writings in a variety of ways. Passage A also went into a lot of detail on Turgenev’s writing. Keeping these details straight might be difficult, so let’s be extra careful in any detail questions that are asking about a specific passage!

Question prompt

A central purpose of Remaining source text redacted.
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

Humanities

Strategy Overview

Review the main points of each passage and the relationship between them, then find an answer reflecting a primary purpose shared by the two

Answer Anticipation

The two passages both discuss aspects of Cather’s work, and they both have a fairly positive view of aspects of it. There are differences in what they specifically discuss and the elements of their arguments, but they both generally agree that Cather used impressionistic techniques (Line 18; Line 56) to create a prevailing mood in a way that didn’t necessarily match with other writing at the time.So while Passage A, for instance, focuses on influences and Passage B focuses on criticism, they both describe Cather’s work. That shared focus will likely be the correct answer.

Answer choices

  1. A
    describe the primary influences Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) (Lines 1-5; Lines 18-20) Passage A explores Cather’s influences, but that’s absent from Passage B. While Passage B does bring up narratology, this was developed in the 1960s while Cather was writing in the 1920s, so it couldn’t have influenced her!

  2. B
    identify some of the Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B matches the stem

    (B) Both passages provide descriptions of Cather’s work throughout, so this is the correct answer.

  3. C
    explain the critical reception Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) (Lines 31-32; Lines 48-55) Passage B brings up critics of Cather (and at least the ones she mentions in her letters were during her lifetime), but Passage A doesn’t.

  4. D
    compare Cather's novels to Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) (Lines 40-47; Lines 56-59) Passage B does this, but Passage A doesn’t distinguish between novels and Cather’s work.

  5. E
    examine the impact of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) (Lines 2-5; Lines 35-37) Passage A looks at the influence a Russian writer had on Cather, not European literature generally. Passage B discusses how a certain literary theory was anticipated by Cather’s work, not how it impacted it. This answer therefore misses the mark on both counts!

What this tests

Discussion

  • Answer E? 1 reply

    Started by TimB