Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Cather admired Russian writers like Turgenev and used their trick of showing characters by actions and a few chosen details instead of naming feelings, creating a mood by leaving things unsaid. She preferred to call some books “narratives,” an idea later echoed by narratology, which judges works mainly as stories rather than by realistic-novel rules. Some critics say her odd handling of time, unclear endings, and simplified characters make her a weak novelist, but the passages say those unconventional choices are intentional parts of her style.
Logic Breakdown
Find the passage's explicit statements about how Cather's work should be categorized—focus on the 1927 letter and the discussion that narratology treats 'narrative' rather than the 'novel.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.Which one of the following most accurately states the main point of passage B?
Correct Answer
A
'Many [reviewers] assert vehemently that it is not a novel. Myself, I prefer to call it a narrative.' And: 'Such a model of criticism, which takes as its object 'narrative' rather than the 'novel,' seems exactly appropriate to Cather's work.' These lines state that Cather and the author view her work principally as narrative and that judging it by the formal characteristics of the realistic novel is not the appropriate approach—precisely what choice A asserts.
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