Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People often reshape or invent parts of cultural history to serve present political goals. For example, nineteenth‑century European writers downplayed Greece’s African and Eastern roots and promoted “traditional” ceremonies to make empire look ancient and natural, while colonized peoples sometimes idealized a pure past during independence movements. Despite these national stories, real cultures are mixed and borrow from many others rather than being pure, separate units.
Logic Breakdown
Look to the passage's opening and concluding sentences for the thesis; treat the Greek, "tradition," and Algerian examples as supporting illustrations of that thesis.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage14.Which one of the following statements most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
E
E is correct because the passage's overarching claim is that nationalist constructions portray cultures as unified, but modern awareness shows cultures are actually composite and cross national boundaries. Support: "As the twentieth century draws to a close, we are learning to see the extent to which accounts and definitions of cultures are influenced by human biases and purposes..."; "we have never been as aware as we are now of the fact that historical and cultural experiences partake of many social and cultural domains and even cross national boundaries..."; and the explicit conclusion: "Far from being unitary, monolithic, or autonomous, cultures actually include more \"foreign\" elements than they consciously exclude." The body paragraphs (Greek revisionism, manufacture of 'tradition', Algerian reconstructions) function as examples, but the final sentences state the main point summarized in E.
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