Library/PT 116/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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

Approach: Read the sentence containing the phrase in the second paragraph and use its immediate context. The sentence states: "However, while a literary work is indeed encoded in various signs and symbols that must be translated for the work to be understood and appreciated, it is not a map." This shows the phrase concedes that textual cues guide interpretation.

Passage Stimulus

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20.

The author's reference to "various signs and symbols" (near the middle of the second paragraph) functions primarily to

Correct Answer
B
The phrase 'various signs and symbols' appears in the clause that a work is 'encoded' and these signs 'must be translated.' The author is conceding that the text contains interpretable cues that readers must use, so the phrase's primary function is to grant that readers must be guided by the text to some degree.
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