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
Scan the passage's discussion of the integration stage (chapters 33-39) to find the specific event the passage says allows Naomi to 'reconcile' with her past.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.According to the passage, the agent of Naomi's reconciliation with her past is
Correct Answer
E
"In chapters 33-39 this surrogate family nurtures Naomi as she develops toward a final integration with the larger society and with herself: as an adult, when she receives a bundle of family documents and letters from her aunt, Naomi breaks through the personal and cultural screens of silence and secretiveness that have enshrouded her past, and reconciles herself with her history." Also: "The bundle of documents (which Kogawa refers to as \"stone-hard facts\") brings Naomi to the recognition of her country's abuse of her people." These sentences identify Naomi's receipt of the bundle of documents and letters as the event that enables her to break through silence and reconcile with her history.
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