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
Approach: Look for the choice that parallels two superficially different forms that nonetheless share an essential feature because both relate to an older, common source. Supporting passage quotes: "Despite its frequent focus on such themes as suffering and self-pity, and despite the censure that it has sometimes received from church communities, the blues, understood more fully, actually has much in common with the traditional religious music known as spirituals." "Each genre, in its own way, aims to bring about what could be called a spiritual transformation: spirituals produce a religious experience and the blues elicits an analogous response." "Indeed, the blues and spirituals may well arise from a common reservoir of experience, tapping into an aesthetic that underlies many aspects of African American culture." "Critics have noted that African American folk tradition, in its earliest manifestations, does not sharply differentiate reality into sacred and secular strains or into irreconcilable dichotomies between good and evil, misery and joy."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage12.Which one of the following is most closely analogous to the author's account of the connections among the blues, spirituals, and certain West African religious practices?
Correct Answer
E
E is correct because it describes two superficially unalike shrubs that nonetheless share a significant structural similarity (leaf structure) and attributes that similarity to their relation to a third, older species that is similar to both. That closely parallels the passage's point that blues and spirituals, though often seen as distinct (sacred vs. secular or melancholy vs. exaltation), share an essential aspect (spiritual transformation) and 'may well arise from a common reservoir of experience' (the older West African-related source).
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