Library/PT 125/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Aida Overton Walker helped make the cakewalk widely popular. The cakewalk began before the Civil War among enslaved African Americans and came from West African dances, with smooth gliding steps and lots of improvisation. It added some European-style moves—like high kicks and couples parading—which were first used to mock slave owners’ fancy dances. Later white performers also parodied the cakewalk, and those versions changed it again. Because the dance mixed different traditions and layers of parody, it could mean different things to different people during a time of big social change. Walker made it appeal to many groups by smoothing its style for middle-class African Americans, stressing its apparent authenticity for white audiences, and using grand flourishes that pleased the newly rich.

Logic Breakdown

Scan for sentences describing the cakewalk's cultural reach and whether it crossed racial lines; the passage explicitly links the dance to European American audiences and racial crossover.

Passage Stimulus

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16.

The passage asserts which one of the following about the cakewalk?

Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly says that the cakewalk's European-derived elements 'later enabled the cakewalk to appeal to European Americans and become one of the first cultural forms to cross the racial divide in North America.' It also states 'Walker's remarkable success at popularizing the cakewalk across otherwise relatively rigid racial boundaries,' directly supporting choice E.
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