Library/PT 101/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

A fake is art made to trick people, and whether something is called a fake depends on the maker’s intent and cultural ideas rather than just how it looks. Jones’s book lists different gray areas—imitations by followers, copies for teaching, works made to look old, and commercial replicas—and shows that faking rises when collecting rises: it was common in Rome (to pass things off as Greek), rare in medieval Europe (art was mainly for worship), and revived in the Renaissance (people admired antiquity and celebrated individual artists, as with Michelangelo). The book also notes that in some cultures, like parts of Africa, authenticity is about use: a mask used in ritual is “authentic” while a similar one made to sell is not.

Logic Breakdown

Quick approach: identify the author's thesis by paraphrasing the opening and closing remarks; focus on sentences that list multiple possibilities and the Bambara mask example showing cultural complications.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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22.

Which one of the following best expresses the author's main point?

Correct Answer
D
D is correct because the passage's central claim is that a range of different motives, practices, and cultural perspectives complicate whether an object should be called a fake. Support: the passage opens, "A fake can be defined as an artwork intended to deceive. The motives of its creator are decisive, and the merit of the object itself is a separate issue," and says the book "begins by noting a variety of possibilities somewhere between the two extremes" including "works by an artist's followers... deliberate archaism... copying for pedagogical purposes, and the production of commercial facsimiles." The author also notes cultural differences: "Fake? also reminds us that in certain cultures authenticity is a foreign concept" and, in the Bambara example, that "only the ritual mask should be seen as authentic, for it is tied to the form's original function." These statements together support the idea that a variety of circumstances make it difficult to determine whether a work can appropriately be called a fake.
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