Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
From about 1935 to 1970, most professional scholars stopped looking at the Iliad and the Odyssey as poems and instead focused on background questions like whether the Trojan War happened, archaeology, and how oral storytelling worked, while non-specialists kept talking about the poems' poetic qualities. Milman Parry’s work on oral tradition helped cause this shift, but after he died many scholars narrowed that work into dry studies about the limits of oral composition; Adam Parry later argued that Homer used a long tradition but also added his own unique, artistic touches, and that idea helped bring attention back to the poems as great literature.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Ask why the author brings in Pope—look for language that links Pope's remark to the modern discussion. Supporting text: "The observations of the English poet Alexander Pope seemed as applicable in 1970 as they had been when he wrote them in 1715: ... 'are rather Philosophical, Historical, Geographical . . . or rather anything than Critical and Poetical.'" This shows the nonpoetical emphasis existed earlier.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.The author of the passage most probably quotes Alexander Pope (end of the first paragraph) in order to
Correct Answer
C
The author uses Pope to show that the tendency to treat the Iliad and Odyssey in nonpoetical (e.g., philosophical, historical, geographical) terms is not new. The passage explicitly says Pope's observations "seemed as applicable in 1970 as they had been when he wrote them in 1715," and then quotes Pope describing critics' remarks as "anything than Critical and Poetical," which directly supports the idea that the nonpoetical emphasis also existed in an earlier century.
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