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
Identify the author's main goal: look for statements about how Tutuola's work should be judged (genre and evaluative criteria) and note supporting descriptions of folktale features in his writing.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage7.The primary purpose of the passage is to
Correct Answer
C
The passage's main aim is to explain how Tutuola's works should be evaluated by establishing appropriate criteria. Support: "However, to estimate properly Tutuola's rightful position in world literature, it is essential to be clear about the genre in which he wrote; literary critics have assumed too facilely that he wrote novels." The author continues: "No matter how flexible a definition of the novel one uses, establishing a set of criteria that enable Tutuola's works to be described as such applies to his works a body of assumptions the works are not designed to satisfy." He then states the alternative evaluative framework: "The most useful approach to Tutuola's works, then, is one that regards him as working within the African oral tradition," and describes features of that tradition and how Tutuola's writing fits them. Together these passages show the primary purpose is to provide an account of Tutuola's work to establish how it should be evaluated.
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