Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Mexican American writers often mix English and Spanish because they live between two cultures. Their stories come from a recent farming past and use simple plots about hard times, keeping Mexican traditions, and the importance of the land. Writers in Mexico, centered in Mexico City, usually write longer, more worldly books and sometimes dismiss Mexican American work as merely regional. But Mexican American writing is actually rich: it focuses on people who are neither fully Mexican nor fully American and blends real life with a nostalgic memory of Mexico to create a new, in-between identity.
Logic Breakdown
Find the passage's overall thesis by identifying sentences that state the principal claim about Mexican American literature (biculturalism, ties to rural Mexico, and creation of a new in‑between identity) and pick the choice that captures all those elements.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following most accurately states the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Choice C accurately summarizes the passage: Mexican American literature reflects bicultural experience, links to rural Mexican culture, and strives to develop a new identity from Mexican and U.S. elements. Supporting quotes: "One of the most prominent characteristics of the literature by United States citizens of Mexican descent is that it is frequently written in a combination of English and Spanish. By not limiting itself to one language, such writing resonates with its authors' bicultural experiences." (para. 1) "Many Mexican Americans are only a generation away from the mostly agrarian culture of their ancestors, and the work of most Mexican American writers shows evidence of heavy influence from this culture." (para. 2) "Many Mexican American writers assert that rather than working to be absorbed into U.S. society, they are engaged in the process of creating a new identity." and "These characters inhabit a social and cultural milieu which is neither that of Mexico nor that of the U.S.... What results is an intermediate cultural borderland in which nostalgia and reality are combined in the service of forging a new identity." (para. 4). Together these passages support C's three components (biculturalism, rural Mexican influence, and the forging of a new identity).
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