Library/PT 110/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage says that although the word 'blues' sounds like sadness, the music is more than just sorrow: like religious spirituals, blues aims to change listeners' feelings and can produce a spiritual-like experience, so people sometimes call it a 'secular spiritual.' Both blues and spirituals come from African American and West African traditions that don't sharply separate sacred and everyday life and that try to create an intense 'standing out from yourself' feeling. Blues singers often bring up pain and then use skill and showmanship to turn that pain into strength, irony, or beauty, making songs that can be both sad and funny.

Logic Breakdown

Read the phrase in its immediate sentence to see whether the author is defining or illustrating the term 'ecstasy.' The surrounding clause explicitly frames 'ecstasy' with an etymological meaning.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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11.

The reference to "standing out from oneself" in the last sentence of the second paragraph primarily serves to

Correct Answer
B
The author is specifying the particular sense in which he uses the word 'ecstasy.' The passage states: These conditions are often referred to as "ecstasy," which is to be understood here with its etymological connotation of 'standing out from oneself,' or rather from one's background psychological state and from one's centered concept of self. That explicit gloss shows the phrase is meant to clarify the intended meaning of the word, so choice B is correct.
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