Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage contrasts two ways of reading literature. Reader-response theory says a work only gets meaning when a person reads it, and different readers will naturally understand it differently. Formalists disagree, arguing the author’s intended meaning is in the text and critics should find that single meaning. The passage says formalism is too narrow and that paying attention to readers’ perspectives can reveal useful new insights, even though some reader-based readings can unfairly impose modern ideas on old works.
Logic Breakdown
Scan for the author's evaluative language about formalism: he summarizes formalists' claims but ultimately rejects their exclusivity (calling their view 'unnecessarily narrow') and argues for alternative methods—so pick the choice that describes a reasoned rejection.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage14.Which one of the following most accurately describes the author's attitude toward formalism as expressed in the passage?
Correct Answer
E
The author acknowledges the formalists' position ('The proponents of formalism argue that their approach is firmly grounded in rational, objective principles...') but then explicitly criticizes it: 'However, since no theory has a monopoly on divining meaning from a text, the formalists' view appears unnecessarily narrow.' He further advocates a method that uses meanings created 'in encounters between texts and readers.' These passages show the author offers a considered, logical rejection of formalism's exclusivism—i.e., a reasoned dismissal.
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