Library/PT 119/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Obasan is told by Naomi, a Japanese‑Canadian girl whose family is forced from their home during World War II. The book is arranged in three simple stages: at first Naomi has a safe family life, then her family is torn apart and she faces loss and exile, and finally she heals and reconnects with herself after getting old family papers. Kogawa also uses Christian images (like turning “stone” facts into “bread”) to criticize the wider society that mistreated Naomi and to show that learning the truth gives her spiritual strength and helps her become a kind of hero.

Logic Breakdown

Find the sentence that explicitly lists the three stages of a rite of passage in order, then match those exact terms and their sequence to the answer choices.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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12.

According to the anthropologists cited by the author, rites of passage are best described by which one of the following sequences of stages?

Correct Answer
B
"According to these anthropologists, a rite of passage begins with separation from a position of security in a highly structured society; proceeds to alienation in a deathlike state where one is stripped of status, property, and rank; and concludes with reintegration into society accompanied by a heightened status gained as a result of the second stage." This sentence names the three stages in order—separation, alienation, reintegration—which exactly matches choice B.
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