Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Countee Cullen was a leading Harlem Renaissance poet who favored formal European poem styles and wrote about big, universal topics like love and death. Critics were split: some admired his technical skill, while others thought those traditional forms weren’t right for writing about race. Cullen said his careful, personal poems still reflected his Black identity, and although his later work turned more to religious themes and mentioned race less directly, he remained committed to racial concerns.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the passage for explicit statements about Cullen's poetic forms and themes (what forms he used and what subjects he treated); the correct answer will be the choice that contradicts those statements.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage9.Which one of the following is NOT identified by the author of the passage as characteristic of Cullen's poetry?
Correct Answer
C
C is correct because the passage explicitly says Cullen preferred traditional, controlled forms rather than avoiding them. For example: "Believing poetry should consist of \"lofty thoughts beautifully expressed,\" Cullen preferred controlled poetic forms." The passage also states that "He used European forms such as sonnets and devices such as quatrains, couplets, and conventional rhyme, and he frequently employed classical allusions and Christian religious imagery," directly contradicting the claim that he 'avoided traditional poetic forms in favor of formal experimentation.'
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