Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
In late-1800s England many middle-class people gave money and time to private charity. Modern critics make two main complaints: first, that small private efforts were too weak to solve big industrial problems like unemployment and needed government action; second, that charity often served the donors by boosting their status, gaining influence, and shaping the poor’s behavior to suit employers (a social-control idea). Critics also call Victorian charity amateurish and assume state-run charity is better (the Whig fallacy), but Victorians knew the objections, feared government-managed aid, and genuinely devoted resources and effort to helping others.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what the author is doing overall: scan for topic sentences that introduce critics' claims and the author's response. The passage outlines modern criticisms of Victorian philanthropy and then evaluates/replies to them.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.Which one of the following best describes the primary purpose of the passage?
Correct Answer
D
The passage's main aim is to present and assess modern criticisms of Victorian philanthropy. Support from the passage: it opens by noting that 'modern commentators have articulated two major criticisms' and paragraph 2 develops 'the more recent charge' (the 'social control' thesis). Paragraph 3 reports that 'Modern critics of Victorian philanthropy often use the words "amateurish" or "inadequate",' and paragraph 4 rejects that reading ('This version of history patronizes the Victorians' and argues they 'put their money where their mouths were'). These sentences show the author is examining and responding to modern evaluations of a historical phenomenon.
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