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
Spot the passage's overall sequence: it opens with a historical fact (Africans introducing rice), then states the central research question (why African Americans grew rice in a cotton economy), and then offers two answers (one for the slavery period and one for the post-abolition period).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.Which one of the following most completely and accurately describes the organization of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Option C accurately describes the passage's structure. The passage begins by presenting a historical fact: "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." It then explicitly raises the central question: "At the heart of Vernon's research is the question of why, in an economy dedicated to maximizing cotton production, African Americans grew rice." Finally the author provides two answers to that question: "She proposes two intriguing answers, depending on whether the time is before or after the end of slavery," followed by the slavery-period explanation (e.g., "plantation owners also ate rice and therefore tolerated or demanded its 'after-hours' cultivation...") and the post-abolition explanations (e.g., "Vernon suggests that these African Americans did not transform the land as a means to an end..." and "Vernon speculates that rice cultivation might also have been a political act"). These three elements—fact, question, two answers—match the organization described in C.
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