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

Passage Breakdown

Until about 1970 there were almost no studies using actual court records to show how medieval English law really affected women. Most earlier scholars relied on law books and statutes that tell how the law was supposed to work, not how it worked in real cases, so they could not say whether women’s rights were blocked or whether women were treated differently in court. Court records could answer those questions, but they are huge, unpublished, written in Latin or Anglo-Norman, and hard to read. Even more important, few historians chose to study women’s legal experiences, so our knowledge is still incomplete though slowly improving.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Find the main move of the paragraph (topic sentence + development + concluding claim). The paragraph (1) states a deficiency, (2) explains the specific nature of that deficiency by showing what other sources cannot reveal, and (3) ends by naming a single remedy. Supporting quotations: "Until about 1970, anyone who wanted to write a comprehensive history of medieval English law as it actually affected women would have found a dearth of published books or articles concerned with specific legal topics relating to women and derived from extensive research in actual court records."; "This is a serious deficiency, since court records are of vital importance in discovering how the law actually affected women, as opposed to how the law was intended to affect them or thought to affect them."; "Only quantitative studies of large numbers of cases would allow even a guess at the answers to these questions, and this scholarly work has been attempted by few."

Passage Stimulus

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23.

Which one of the following best describes the organization of the first paragraph of the passage?

Correct Answer
D
The paragraph begins by describing a deficiency (a dearth of research based on court records), then explains the specific nature of that deficiency by showing what treatises/commentaries/statutes cannot tell us (e.g., how privileges were thwarted, how women fared in court), and concludes by asserting that only one kind of remedy—"Only quantitative studies of large numbers of cases"—would even allow a guess at answers. Choice D accurately captures this structure, including the passage's claim that this remedy is the sole effective means.
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