PrepTest 139
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Humanities
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Jayne Hinds Bidaut revived tintype to photograph insects from her collection.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Bidaut drawn to tintype because it contains detail and dimensionality (fourth sentence)
- Paper prints too flat (third sentence).
- Tintype is an image captured on a thin, coated piece of iron (fourth sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “struck by” (first sentence); “set out” (second sentence); “too flat” (third sentence); “detail and dimensionality” (fourth sentence)
- Bidaut drawn to tintype because it contains detail and dimensionality (fourth sentence)
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Dan Estabrook uses albumen prints and tintype in nostalgic fantasy.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Estabrook deployed albumen prints and tintype to create old-looking images, imagining leaving them at flea markets and antique shops to create past that never existed (second sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “inspired a fantasy” (first sentence); “to be discovered” (second sentence); “bygone time” (second sentence)
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Growing trend among photographers: reviving old photographic techniques.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Types of old practices being revived: tintype, daguerrotype, albumen, pinhole cameras, emulsions from nineteenth-century recipes
- Widespread popularity of old techniques
- Author’s attitude: “forward into its past” (first sentence); “coax new expressive effects” (second sentence); “so diverse” (third sentence); “groundswell” (fourth sentence)
Paragraph 4
- Paragraph note
- Current appeal of old techniques is their unreliable, idiosyncratic results.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Old techniques were prone to accident and results not easily replicable; that was why they were abandoned in the past (first sentence, third sentence)
- Unique results of old techniques are why modern photographers like old methods; they can put an individual stamp on each picture (second sentence, sixth sentence)
- Example: Estabrook (seventh sentence), who uses old techniques to create illusion of age in his prints (eighth-tenth sentences)
- Author’s attitude: “heavily hands-on” (first sentence); “source of their appeal” (second sentence); “prime reason” (third sentence); “as a curiosity” (fifth sentence); “the very uncertainty” (sixth sentence) “embraces accident” (eighth sentence); “illusion of antiquity” (eighth sentence); “project onto it” (ninth sentence); “sense of nostalgia” (tenth sentence)
- Unique results of old techniques are why modern photographers like old methods; they can put an individual stamp on each picture (second sentence, sixth sentence)
- Old techniques were prone to accident and results not easily replicable; that was why they were abandoned in the past (first sentence, third sentence)
Paragraph 5
- Paragraph note
- Photographers motivated by desire to create unique works and recover intimacy with photography.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Old techniques offer photographers opportunity to create unique works made during a specific moment in time (second sentence)
- Old techniques allow photographers to be more hands-on than usual in today’s mass media world (third sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “preoccupation with contingency” (first sentence); “virtually guarantees” (second sentence); “indelible mark” (second sentence); “recovering an intimacy” (third sentence)
Main Point:
In a surprising trend, many photographers are embracing old, idiosyncratic, and labor-intensive photographic techniques in an attempt to revive intimacy with the photographic process and produce unique, one-of-a-kind images.
Key Lines?Paragraph 1, Sentence 4 (P1 S4) - Aesthetic appeal of tintype for Bidaut
P2 S1 - Nostalgic appeal of albumen prints and tintypes for Estabrook
P3 S3 - Trend among photographers toward old techniques
P4 S1-2 - Reasons old techniques are appealing
P4 S7 - Estabrook’s reasons for using old techniques
P5 S2-3 - Two motivations of photographers using old techniques
Meta-Structure?Phenomenon/Explanation - This passage uses a Phenomenon/Explanation Meta-Structure. The author begins with two examples: Bidaut and Estabrook, and then states the wider trend that those two photographers exemplify, namely, a growing usage of old image-making techniques among modern artists. Next, the author returns to Estabrook’s aesthetic and cultural preoccupations before arguing that the photographers engaging in the old technique trend are motivated by two important things: a desire to create one-of-a-kind images that could only have been made in a specific time and place and a desire to rediscover intimacy with the photographic process that is missing from today’s mass media-dominated world.
The minor Meta-Structure evident in this passage is Example. The author uses the examples of Bidaut and Estabrook to illustrate why photographers utilize old techniques and then names various photographic techniques that are being revived to give the reader an idea of what kinds of methods the avant-gardists are using.
It could be argued that the main Meta-Structure of this passage is in fact Generalization/Example, because the passage is heavily laced with examples. However, the point of those examples is not just to illustrate a general statement, that photographers are returning to old techniques, but to illuminate why photographers are doing this in an otherwise heavily technology-laden artistic landscape. The author paints this trend as a surprising mystery, not just a statement of fact. As a mystery, this trend deserves an explanation, which is what the author gives in the final paragraph and what the examples of Bidaut and Estabrook illustrate.
Last Thoughts?Understanding the author’s explanation of the photographers’ motivations for using old techniques is key to understanding the author’s argument. The examples of Estabrook and Bidaut are important not only because they illustrate the trend toward old techniques but because they show the diversity of motivations behind artists’ usage of those techniques: Bidaut is trying to accomplish a specific aesthetic goal and Estabrook is trying to create new experiences for people viewing old-looking (but actually modern) photographs. The factors drawing such diverse artists together are the desire to create unique images and the desire to recapture a sense of hands-on creativity with a medium that is becoming increasingly impersonal.
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: D
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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AA biomedical researcher in Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) Does this answer choice describe a situation in which an old method is used to produce something that seems imperfect but is actually desired by the user?
No. The researcher in this answer choice is merely researching, not producing anything, so the parallel with the photographers in the passage doesn’t work.
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BAn architect investigates ancient Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) Does this answer choice describe a situation in which an old method is used to produce something that seems imperfect but is actually desired by the user?
No. The architect in the answer choice is being inspired by old building styles, not using old building methods to create a new building, which is what would be necessary in this situation in order to parallel what is going on with the photographers.
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CAn engineer uses an Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) Does this answer choice describe a situation in which an old method is used to produce something that seems imperfect but is actually desired by the user?
No. This answer choice is a little closer, because the engineer is actually creating something based on something old, but in this case, the thing being used is a design, not a process, and the parallel with the photographers would work only if this answer choice described an old process being used to create something new.
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DA clothing designer uses Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D matches the stem
(D) Does this answer choice describe a situation in which an old method is used to produce something that seems imperfect but is actually desired by the user?
Yes. This answer choice is a good parallel with the situation of the photographers in the passage because the designer uses an old process to create something that seems irregular and imperfect, but which is actually desired by the user because they want to replicate the texture of handwoven clothes.
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EAn artist uses a Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) Does this answer choice describe a situation in which an old method is used to produce something that seems imperfect but is actually desired by the user?
No. The process described in this answer choice is new, not old, so the parallel with the photographers in the passage doesn’t work.
Discussion
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Why is it D and not C? 3 replies
Started by lsatstudier1