Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
In the 1970s some Native American groups sued in U.S. courts to win official recognition and protect land, but courts required legal kinds of proof like written records and clear deeds and used a narrow idea of tribe as self-government plus a defined territory. The Mashpee Wampanoag lost because their history and authority were passed down orally, so the court would not treat their testimony as the written proof it wanted. More recently, courts have begun to accept different kinds of evidence and to recognize that treating oral and written cultures the same way can be unfair.
Logic Breakdown
Ask: what is the passage mainly doing? Look for the general claim and how the author supports it—does the passage illustrate a broad problem with a detailed example?
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage5.The passage is primarily concerned with
Correct Answer
B
The passage identifies a general problem—the mismatch between U.S. legal discourse and Native American systems of discourse—and then illustrates that problem with a detailed case. Support: "This process brought to light some of the differing perceptions and definitions that can exist between cultures whose systems of discourse are sometimes at variance." The author then discusses the Mashpee suit in detail: "In one instance, the entire legal dispute turned on whether the suing community... constituted a tribe," showing the passage uses a specific example to illuminate the broader problem.
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