Library/PT 113/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Ellison’s Invisible Man mixes issues about African Americans with European ideas about a fragile, split sense of self. Critics said he should be more openly political or develop a purely African American style, but Ellison argued that artists shouldn’t have to give up their individuality or be forced into one cultural box. He compares his approach to jazz, which borrows and transforms other music while staying connected to its community, showing that a lone, unique voice in the novel still grows from and stays tied to a larger culture.

Logic Breakdown

Identify the passage's dominant move: it states critics' objections to Ellison and then spends the rest of the passage defending his artistic choices (using a jazz analogy). Focus on the sentences that present the criticisms and Ellison's reply.

Passage Stimulus

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20.

The primary purpose of the passage is to

Correct Answer
D
Correct. The passage's primary purpose is to defend Ellison against criticisms that he should have subordinated individuality to political or culturally specific demands. The passage first states the criticisms: "For this thematic blend, Ellison received two related criticisms: that his allegiance to the concerns of the individual prevented him from directing his art more toward the political action...; and that his indulging in European fictional modes lessened his contribution to the development of a distinctly African American novelistic style." It then gives Ellison's response: "Ellison found these criticisms to voice a common demand, namely that writers should censor themselves and sacrifice their individuality... He replied that it demeans a people and its artists to suggest that a particular historical situation requires cultural segregation in the arts." The later discussion of jazz ("Models for understanding Invisible Man... can be found in Ellison's own love for and celebration of jazz") is offered to support that defense. These quoted passages show the author is rebutting critics and defending Ellison's work.
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