Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Amos Tutuola became famous in the 1950s for stories that mix English and Yoruba. Some critics called them novels, but the passage says we should see them as folktales instead: in the oral tradition storytellers use shared, familiar plots and are expected to repeat, embellish, and adapt those stories for their audience. Tutuola’s repeated scenes, language mixing, personal twists, and storyteller-style endings show he follows that folktale tradition rather than the usual rules for novels.
Logic Breakdown
Scan the opening paragraphs for the critics' stated objections. The passage explicitly reports what some critics said (look for phrases like 'dismissed his works' and 'unwelcome liberties').
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.According to the passage, some critics have criticized Tutuola's work on the ground that
Correct Answer
D
The passage explicitly reports: 'Others, however, dismissed his works as simple retellings of local tales, full of unwelcome liberties taken with the details of the well-known story lines.' This statement directly matches option D, which says his writing 'borrows substantially from well-known story lines and at the same time alters their details.' The passage also notes, 'Many of his critics are right to suggest that Tutuola's subjects are not strikingly original,' reinforcing that critics charged he borrowed familiar material.
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