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

Approach: For each choice, check whether the passage explicitly supplies that information. The passage explicitly states Ellison's attitude toward jazz (para. 3), his reply to critics (para. 2), that some ideas derive from European (and African American) predecessors (paras. 1 & 4), and that some jazz musicians used 'the European-influenced songs of U.S. theater' (para. 3). It does not identify specific themes in Invisible Man that were influenced by themes prevalent in jazz. Relevant quotes: 'Ellison's own love for and celebration of jazz.'; 'jazz ... provides a rich model for understanding the relationship of artist to community and parallels the ways the protagonist's voice in Invisible Man is set within a wider communal context.'

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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21.

The passage provides information to answer each of the following questions EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
B
B is correct because the passage never specifies particular themes in Invisible Man that were influenced by themes prevalent in jazz. Instead the passage treats jazz as an interpretive model and draws parallels (analogy) between jazz and the novel. For example: 'Models for understanding Invisible Man... can be found in Ellison's own love for and celebration of jazz.' and 'jazz, featuring solos that, however daring, remain rooted in the band's rhythm section, provides a rich model for understanding the relationship of artist to community and parallels the ways the protagonist's voice in Invisible Man is set within a wider communal context.' These statements show modeling and parallelism, not a claim that specific themes in the novel were derived from themes prevalent in jazz, so the passage does not answer option B.
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