Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The Cultural Revolution made Chinese artists paint only government-approved, heroic scenes and banned nonpolitical subjects. In the 1980s some artists pushed back: Scar Art painters who had been sent to the countryside painted the real poverty and suffering they saw, focusing on ordinary, private life instead of official, perfect images. Scar Art later became politicized and lost some members, and the related Native Soil movement followed by painting and often romanticizing rural life—sometimes to appeal to Western buyers.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the third paragraph where the Native Soil movement is described. Identify language that characterizes it (e.g., 'embodied a growing nostalgia', 'reacted ... by idealizing traditional peasant life', and 'trivialized ... by a tendency to romanticize') and use those lines to support the inference.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following views of the Native Soil movement?
Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly describes Native Soil as a nostalgic, idealizing reaction to modernization: 'a related development known as the Native Soil movement, which focused on the native landscape and embodied a growing nostalgia for the charms of peasant society in the face of modernization.' It further states, 'the Native Soil painters reacted instead by idealizing traditional peasant life.' The author also notes that Native Soil was later 'trivialized by a tendency to romanticize certain qualities of rural Chinese society in order to appeal to Western galleries and collectors.' These sentences show that the movement's nostalgic representation of rural life was central to how it stood in opposition to Revolutionary Realism, so E is correct.
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