Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many Hispanic-American writers use Spanish and have tried to stop depending on Spain by doing two things: borrowing European and North American styles (cosmopolitanism) and writing about local Hispanic life and language (nativism). Critics often praise technique but want more local detail, or praise local realism but complain about rough form. Historically writers swing between experimenting with foreign styles and returning to native themes; today they try to balance both—learning from outside cultures while staying true to their own lands and people.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Find explicit statements of the author's stance on nativism. The author presents nativism positively as a necessary return to roots and as a counterbalance to cosmopolitanism. Support: 'nativism, the return to the private or original culture.'; 'in order not to disappear into the mainstream, one must return to one's origins.'; 'we attempt to reconcile the opposing tendencies of cosmopolitanism and nativism.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage20.Based on the passage, the author's attitude toward nativism in Hispanic-American literature is most likely
Correct Answer
B
The author treats nativism as a valuable, necessary counterpart to cosmopolitanism and favors reconciling the two. He defines nativism positively ('nativism, the return to the private or original culture'), insists 'in order not to disappear into the mainstream, one must return to one's origins,' and states 'we attempt to reconcile the opposing tendencies of cosmopolitanism and nativism.' These passages express balanced approval rather than wholehearted zeal or rejection, so 'general approval' fits best.
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