Library/PT 107/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Before World War I, several European painters broke away from traditional realistic art, and some people later said their work “predicted” the modern world and its political upheavals. The passage argues this is misleading: their importance comes from new ways of showing reality, not from forecasting politics. For example, Picasso and Braque were focused on problems of representation rather than social reform, and Delacroix’s changes responded to political events that had already happened, showing art often reacts to change instead of predicting it.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Identify the author's main claim in response to the view that certain pre–WWI painters were "prophetic." The author affirms that these works anticipated changes, but specifies that the anticipation was artistic not social. Supporting passage sentences: "are often credited with having anticipated not just subsequent developments in the arts, but also the political and social disruptions and upheavals of the modern world that came into being during and after the war."; "But the forward-looking quality attributed to these artists should instead be credited to their exceptional aesthetic innovations rather than to any power to make clever guesses about political or social trends."

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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1.

Which one of the following most accurately states the main idea of the passage?

Correct Answer
B
Option B accurately restates the passage's main point: while critics call some pre–WWI paintings "prophetic," the author argues that their forward-looking quality reflects new ways of artistic perception and expression rather than intentional predictions of social change. The passage first notes critics' claims that the painters "are often credited with having anticipated...the political and social disruptions," then explicitly rejects that interpretation: "But the forward-looking quality attributed to these artists should instead be credited to their exceptional aesthetic innovations rather than to any power to make clever guesses about political or social trends." The passage also supports this with the example that Picasso and Braque were concerned with "problems of representation and form" and that "The reformation of society was of no interest to them as artists," reinforcing that the anticipation was aesthetic, not prophetic.
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