Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Robin D. G. Kelley’s book looks at why many Black workers in Alabama joined the Communist Party and how they used it to organize, focusing on what the party actually did rather than its ideas. He says the earlier, louder phase called the Third Period helped Black farmers and workers because its powerful talk about a better world and actions by groups like the International Labor Defense made the party seem like a real ally. When the party shifted to the Popular Front and tried to please moderates, it backed away from fighting white racism and local Black issues, so fewer Black people stayed involved. Kelley also says other things—like fights inside the party and big changes in farming—helped cause the decline.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on Kelley's stated purpose: he analyzes how and why the Communist Party attracted and functioned for African-American workers (not to judge ideological correctness). Key supporting sentences: 'Kelley asks not whether the Communist Party was ideologically correct, but how it came to attract a substantial number of African-American workers and how these workers could embrace and use the Communist Party as a vehicle for organizing themselves.' and 'He insists on measuring communism not by its abstract tenets but by its ability to interact with a culture to generate bold class organization.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.Which one of the following most accurately characterizes the passage's main point?
Correct Answer
E
E is correct because the passage's central point is that Hammer and Hoe provides a nuanced analysis of the relationship between the Communist Party and African-American workers in the 1930s–40s. The passage opens by stating Kelley's aim ('Kelley asks not whether the Communist Party was ideologically correct, but how it came to attract a substantial number of African-American workers...') and his method ('He insists on measuring communism not by its abstract tenets but by its ability to interact with a culture to generate bold class organization.'). The body of the passage then details Kelley's findings — how the Third Period rhetoric resonated and helped organize African Americans ('Indeed Kelley argues that the wild, often sectarian Third Period... better undergirded organization among African-American farmers and industrial workers.') and how the Popular Front saw participation decline ('The Popular Front saw African-American participation in the Communist Party decline.') — and notes Kelley’s nuanced conclusion that multiple factors explain the decline ('Even so, Kelley is far from claiming that the change to a Popular Front line was the sole reason...'). Together these elements show the book offers new insights into that relationship, which is what E states.
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