Library/PT 129/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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

Look for lines saying Cather (and Turgenev/narratologists) avoid direct psychological representation of characters; choose the option describing explicit inner thoughts. Key supporting lines: Passage A: 'not depicting her characters' emotions directly but telling us how they behave' and 'whatever is felt upon the page without being specifically named there—that, one might say, is created.' Passage B: 'Narratologists tend not to focus on the characteristics of narrative's dominant modern Western form, the "realistic novel": direct psychological characterization...'.

Passage Stimulus

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18.

Both authors would be likely to agree that which one of the following, though typical of many novels, would NOT be found in Cather's work?

Correct Answer
E
Both passages emphasize avoidance of direct depiction of characters' inner life. Passage A says Cather (following Turgenev) 'not [to] depict her characters' emotions directly but tell us how they behave' and values 'the thing not named' ('whatever is felt upon the page without being specifically named there—that, one might say, is created'). Passage B notes narratologists 'tend not to focus on...direct psychological characterization.' Therefore an explicit narration of a character's inner thoughts (an account of anxieties and wishes) would not be found in Cather's work.
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