Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Amelia Wallace Vernon found strong evidence that Africans brought rice and rice-growing skills to early America and that African Americans kept growing rice into the early 1900s. She says that during slavery owners ate rice and let or made enslaved people grow it on land not used for cotton, and that rice work gave enslaved people some independent time. After slavery, growing rice didn’t make much money, so Vernon argues people cleared and cared for land mainly because working the land made it feel like home and maybe to symbolically claim land they had been promised.
Logic Breakdown
Pick the title that captures both (1) Vernon's claim that Africans introduced rice to what is now the United States in the early 18th century and (2) the passage's explanations for why rice was grown during slavery and after emancipation; eliminate choices that misstate the timeframe, overstate economic impact, or narrow the focus too much.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.Which one of the following titles most completely and accurately summarizes the contents of the passage?
Correct Answer
A
A is correct because it states the passage's two central points: that Africans introduced rice and rice-cultivation methods into what is now the United States in the early eighteenth century, and that rice continued to be cultivated during slavery and after abolition for reasons the author examines. Support from the passage: "a recent study by Amelia Wallace Vernon helps to dispel this notion by showing that Africans introduced rice and the methods of cultivating it into what is now the United States in the early eighteenth century." Also: "She uncovered, for example, an 1876 document that details that in 1718 ... to trade for 400 Africans including some \"who know how to cultivate rice.\"" The passage then treats cultivation during slavery ("During the period of slavery, plantation owners also ate rice and therefore tolerated or demanded its \"after-hours\" cultivation...") and after emancipation ("Vernon suggests that these African Americans did not transform the land as a means to an end, but rather as an end in itself"; "Vernon speculates that rice cultivation might also have been a political act..."). Title A most completely and accurately summarizes these points.
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