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

Identify the passage's overall organization: it describes the "prophetic" artistic phenomenon, reports a critic's prophetic interpretation, then rejects that interpretation and advances an alternative explanation (aesthetic innovation) supported with examples.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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5.

Which one of the following most accurately describes the contents of the passage?

Correct Answer
A
Choice A is correct. The passage (1) describes the phenomenon—"For some years before the outbreak of World War I, a number of painters ... developed works of art that some have described as prophetic: paintings that by challenging viewers' habitual ways of perceiving the world of the present are thus said to anticipate a future world that would be very different." (2) reports the prophetic reading—"One art critic even goes so far as to claim that it is the very prophetic power of these artworks, and not their break with traditional artistic techniques, that constitutes their chief interest and value." (3) offers an alternative and criticizes the prophetic 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." (4) supports that alternative with examples (discussion of Picasso and Braque and the Delacroix case—"...most art historians have decided that Delacroix adjusted himself to new social conditions that were already coming into being as a result of political upheavals that had occurred in 1830, as opposed to other artists who supposedly told of changes still to come."). This sequence—describe phenomenon, report an interpretation, propose and support an alternative while criticizing the original interpretation—matches choice A.
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