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
Approach: determine the function of the phrase in the second paragraph — it is used to contrast what is expected of novels with what is expected of folktales. Supporting sentence from the passage: Many of his critics are right to suggest that Tutuola's subjects are not strikingly original, but it is important to bear in mind that whereas realism and originality are expected of the novel, the teller of folktales is expected to derive subjects and frameworks from the corpus of traditional lore. Also note the author's opening claim that critics have too readily assumed Tutuola wrote novels.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage6.The author refers to the "corpus of traditional lore" (second-to-last sentence of the second paragraph) as part of an attempt to
Correct Answer
A
The author invokes the 'corpus of traditional lore' to show that folktales operate under different expectations than novels (e.g., derivation from traditional material rather than originality). Thus the phrase functions to distinguish expectations that apply to one literary genre from those that apply to another, supporting the view that Tutuola should be read as a teller of folktales rather than a novelist.
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