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
For an EXCEPT question, check each option against explicit statements in the passage; eliminate any choice directly supported by passage sentences and select the one not addressed (i.e., lacking specific information).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.The passage provides information to answer all of the following questions EXCEPT:
Correct Answer
C
The passage only notes that "Greek civilization was known originally to have had roots in Egyptian and various other African and Eastern cultures," but it gives no specifics about how African influence shaped Greek culture. For example: "Greek civilization was known originally to have had roots in Egyptian and various other African and Eastern cultures, but some current scholars charge that its identity was revised during the course of the nineteenth century to support an image of European cultural dominance—its African and other cultural influences either actively purged or hidden from view by European scholars." These lines mention roots but do not describe in what ways African cultural influence affected ancient Greece, so C is not answerable from the passage.
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