Library/PT 122/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Historians have tried to identify the tribal origin of African sculptures by small style details, but this is misleading because art styles spread through trade and workshops. Families and workshops (called centers of style) often make pieces for many different tribes, so the same maker can carve several tribal styles while keeping the same overall look. The Konaté family in Ouri, for example, carves for five neighboring groups and tourists, and their subtle differences are hard for outsiders to tell. Because styles are shared widely, you usually can’t reliably find a sculpture’s exact tribal origin just from fine stylistic details.

Logic Breakdown

Identify the passage's main point: that 'centers of style' (workshops/families producing art for multiple tribes) diffuse styles and thus undermine historians' attempts to attribute sculptures to single tribes. Use the Konaté example and explicit statements about diffusion to choose the best title.

Passage Stimulus

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7.

Which one of the following titles most completely and accurately describes the contents of the passage?

Correct Answer
A
Title A is correct because the passage's central concern is the existence of 'centers of style' and their implications for art historians' classifications. Support from the passage: 'Objects and styles have often been diffused through trade, most notably by workshops of artists who sell their work over a large geographical area.' The passage explicitly identifies 'centers of style' and explains that 'families, clans, and workshops produce sculpture and other art that is dispersed over a large, multitribal geographical area.' The Konaté example reinforces the point: although the Konaté 'can identify the styles they carve,' their characteristic patterns are 'so subtly different that few people outside of the area can distinguish Nuna masks from Ko masks,' and therefore 'one cannot readily tell which group produced an object by analyzing fine style characteristics.' These passages show that the essay is about centers of style and how they complicate historians' tribal attributions, which Title A most accurately and completely captures.
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