Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many scholars study Native American autobiographies only as written accounts recorded and edited by non-Natives, but this misses how Native people traditionally told life stories without writing. Before contact, identity was often communal and tied to land and society, and personal histories were shared in the moment through songs, chants, dances, new names, tattoos, painted robes and tepees, and group reenactments. These forms were made and performed with help from the tribe, so Native autobiographies were both individual and cultural and were shaped by how people in the community passed them on.
Logic Breakdown
Read the clause that defines 'as-told-to life histories' (who solicited, translated, recorded, and edited them) and paraphrase that collaborative process to pick the answer that best restates it.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.Which one of the following most accurately conveys the meaning of the phrase "bicultural composite authorship" as it is used in the first sentence of the passage?
Correct Answer
E
The passage describes those texts as "as-told-to life histories that were solicited, translated, recorded, and edited by non-Native American collaborators." This shows the written documents were produced by non‑Native collaborators based on oral accounts from Native individuals. Option E — "written by a member of one culture but based on oral communication by a member of another culture" — accurately paraphrases that description.
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