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

Locate where the passage discusses the relationship between the domestic novel and the slave narrative; the author explicitly treats both as distinct genres and contrasts them.

Passage Stimulus

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13.

With which one of the following statements would the author of the passage be most likely to agree?

Correct Answer
B
The passage explicitly treats both the domestic novel and the slave narrative as literary genres and discusses their relationship. For example: 'one critic, for example, claims that in Jacobs's work the purposes of the domestic novel overshadow those of the typical slave narrative. But the relationship between the two genres is more complex.' The author pairs 'the typical slave narrative' with the domestic novel and calls them 'two genres,' so she would agree that the slave narrative, no less than the domestic novel, constitutes a literary genre. (See also: 'Jacobs crafted her narrative, in accordance with the mainstream literary genre of the sentimental domestic novel...')
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