Library/PT 109/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Harriet Jacobs wrote Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl in the familiar style of home-and-family novels to make free women sympathize with her, showing that enslaved women also care about marriage, home, and family. Some critics say using that genre weakens her slave story, but Jacobs actually creates a clash between the genre’s hopeful ideals and the harsh reality of slavery—she must send away a lover and wins freedom only by losing most of her family. By using the domestic novel’s language while exposing how its values don’t fit enslaved women’s lives, Jacobs forces readers to drop usual assumptions to understand her experience.

Logic Breakdown

Focus on the passage's final sentence where the author defines 'antidomestic novel.' The author says Jacobs "accepts readily the goals of the genre, but demonstrates that its hierarchy of values does not apply when examined from the perspective of a female slave," which points directly to answer C. Support: Her narrative thus becomes an antidomestic novel, for Jacobs accepts readily the goals of the genre, but demonstrates that its hierarchy of values does not apply when examined from the perspective of a female slave.

Passage Stimulus

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12.

The author describes Jacobs's narrative as an "antidomestic novel" (last sentence of the passage) for which one of the following reasons?

Correct Answer
C
Option C paraphrases the passage's explicit definition of 'antidomestic novel.' The passage states, "Her narrative thus becomes an antidomestic novel, for Jacobs accepts readily the goals of the genre, but demonstrates that its hierarchy of values does not apply when examined from the perspective of a female slave." The passage gives concrete examples (e.g., Jacobs must send her lover away rather than follow the domestic-romantic script, and she attains freedom only by suffering "separation from most of her family, including one of her own children") that show the domestic novel's value-hierarchy fails when applied to a female slave—exactly what C says.
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