Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Of the 1,000+ memoirs about the French Revolution, only about 80 were by women and most of those women were upper-class because they could read and write and because supporters of the king could publish more safely after the monarchy returned in 1815. Some historians doubt these memoirs since they were written years later and might be biased, but other scholars say we can check public events across different accounts and judge private stories by whether they are consistent and fit the writer’s character. Denis Bertholet finds that, even though many women describe traditional roles like daughter or wife, they also acted politically—freeing prisoners, saving loved ones, and even fighting—so their memoirs are varied, believable, and show an early feminist voice.
Logic Breakdown
Look for the author's central claim: although some historians doubt these memoirs because they were written long after the events, the passage reports that scholars find them credible (both factually and subjectively) and that they document diverse forms of women's participation. Choose the answer that includes both reliability and women's varied participation.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following most completely and accurately states the main idea of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
The passage acknowledges skepticism—"Because the memoirs were written so long after the events they describe, some historians question their reliability"—but immediately reports an opposing view: "other scholars have shown that close inspection of these documents resolves such doubts on two scores." The passage cites factual support ("for major public happenings, there are often multiple accounts, allowing for cross-verification") and subjective criteria for personal events (internal verifications and narrative voice). It then states that "women's memoirs during this period exhibit a variety of personalities and experiences, and describe how women participated, individually and collectively, in the events of the Revolution," and that "Bertholet's study attests to the credibility of these accounts on both factual and subjective grounds." Answer C accurately and completely captures that combined point: although written years later, the memoirs can be regarded as factually and subjectively reliable accounts of the various ways women participated.
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