Library/PT 102/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Some sociologists say powwows—Native American gatherings—show tribes are blending into a single “Pan-Indian” culture and will be absorbed into mainstream American society because dances and rituals now spread easily with more travel, city living, and shared politics. The author argues this is too simple: yes, intertribal features have spread, but many tribes are also reviving their own unique traditions, and Native people themselves distinguish intertribal events from tribe-specific ones. So both things are happening at once: intertribal activities strengthen a broad Native identity against outside threats, while tribal traditions keep each tribe’s separate identity alive.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Identify the author's primary purpose—does he accept or challenge the Pan-Indian/assimilation claim? Focus on the passage's central claim and rebuttal. Key supporting sentences: "...claim the inevitable outcome of this tendency is the eventual dissolution of tribes and the complete assimilation of native Americans into Euroamerican society."; "However, there is no evidence that this is happening to native American groups."; "Intertribal activities, on the other hand, reinforce native American identity along a broader front, where this identity is directly threatened by outside influences."

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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21.

In the passage, the author is primarily concerned with doing which one of the following?

Correct Answer
C
The author’s main goal is to question the belief that Native American societies will inevitably be assimilated into Euroamerican society by arguing that intertribalism does not produce dissolution but can strengthen a broader Native identity while tribal traditions are also being revitalized. He presents critics' claim about inevitable dissolution ("...claim the inevitable outcome of this tendency is the eventual dissolution of tribes and the complete assimilation of native Americans into Euroamerican society."), rejects the underlying assumption ("...there is no evidence that this is happening to native American groups."), notes both the rise of intertribal borrowing and concurrent tribal revitalizations (para. 2), and concludes that "Intertribal activities ... reinforce native American identity along a broader front." Together these points show the author is primarily disputing the inevitability of assimilation by reframing intertribalism as identity-strengthening.
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