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
Look for explicit statements about what the author praises; the passage repeatedly credits Kogawa's "subtle techniques," especially her use of form and symbols.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.Based on the passage, which one of the following aspects of Kogawa's work does the author of the passage appear to value most highly?
Correct Answer
C
The passage directly states that "Kogawa employs subtle techniques that serve to emphasize her major character's heroism and to critique the majority culture. The former end is achieved through the novel's form and the latter through the symbols it employs." It later concludes that "Through the careful deployment of structure and symbol, Kogawa thus manages to turn Naomi's experience... into a journey of heroic transformation and a critique of the majority culture." These explicit statements show the author most highly values Kogawa's subtle use of literary techniques (form and symbols).
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