Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Frida Kahlo painted strong, often shocking images drawn from Mexican and Aztec traditions to show both her personal suffering and her political support for Mexico’s cultural independence. Although people usually focus on her private pain, she was also a political activist influenced by Marxism and Mexican nationalism that admired Aztec communal life. In works like her 1932 Self-Portrait on the Border, she contrasts an industrial, modern United States with an organic, ancient Mexico to argue that Mexico should modernize without losing its culture. She used a simple folk-art style and familiar symbols so ordinary people could understand her, and many Mexicans view her as a national symbol.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the passage for the sentence describing early-20th-century Mexican nationalists' attitude toward the United States; the correct answer is stated explicitly.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage3.Which one of the following stances toward the United States does the passage mention as characterizing Mexican nationalists in the early twentieth century?
Correct Answer
A
Answer A is correct. The passage explicitly states: "Mexican nationalism, reacting against contemporary United States political intervention in labor disputes as well as against past domination by Spain,..." This directly indicates opposition to U.S. involvement in Mexico's internal affairs.
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