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
Quickly identify each passage's main focus: Passage A links Cather to Turgenev's impressionistic technique; Passage B frames her work as a 'narrative' and lists its unconventional features. The correct choice names the distinctive characteristics both passages describe.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.A central purpose of each passage is to
Correct Answer
B
Both passages primarily describe distinctive characteristics of Cather's work. Passage A emphasizes an impressionistic technique: "Turgenev's method was to select details that described a character's appearance and actions without trying to explain them," and it highlights Cather's "the thing not named," "selection and simplification," and the "fusing of the physical world of setting and actions with the emotional reality of the characters." Passage B presents her preference "to call it a narrative" and explicitly lists unconventional features of her fiction: "unusual treatment of narrative time, unexpected focus, ambiguous conclusions, a preference for the bold, simple, and stylized in character as well as in landscape." These quoted lines show both passages focus on delineating Cather's characteristic narrative and stylistic traits.
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