Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Romare Bearden’s paintings do two main things: they show that he developed new, creative painting techniques, and they use those techniques to portray the real variety of African‑American life. He mixed painting and collage to turn ordinary scenes into layered, expressive images. In the 1930s he painted both somber images of hardship in Harlem—using dark colors to suggest despair—and lively scenes of religion, music, and family with equal vividness. Instead of simple stereotypes, his work aims to reveal the full, rich, and varied experience of African‑American communities.
Logic Breakdown
Find the lines that contrast Bearden's full, "poetic" portrayal with the "simplifications" of journalism and documentary photography and infer what those media therefore fail to show (the richness/depth of African-American life).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.It can be inferred from the passage that journalistic and photographic records of Depression-era Harlem generally do not
Correct Answer
D
The passage explicitly states that Bearden "sought in his work to reveal in all its fullness a world long hidden by the clichés of sociology and rendered cloudy by the simplifications of journalism and documentary photography." It also says he "concentrated on releasing its poetry—its family rituals and its ceremonies of affirmation and celebration." These statements indicate that journalism and documentary photography generally fail to depict the full richness and depth (the "poetry") of African-American life, so D is correct.
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