Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Critics sometimes group Sarah Orne Jewett with mid-1800s domestic novelists because both focus on women and home life. But Jewett differs: older domestic novels center on children and use stories to teach Protestant moral lessons, while Jewett's fiction almost never treats childrearing and is largely secular. The passage argues this stems from different ideas about fiction's purpose - earlier writers used fiction to instruct, while Jewett treated fiction as art valued for its form.
Logic Breakdown
Locate where the passage describes how Jewett's conception of fiction shaped her work. Focus on the paragraph that contrasts Jewett's 'high-cultural' view with the mid-19th-century domestic novelists and note explicit statements about the aims and effects of that aesthetic.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.The passage most helps to answer which one of the following questions?
Correct Answer
D
The passage explicitly links Jewett's aesthetic to the character of her fiction. It states that Jewett 'embodies the late nineteenth-century high-cultural conception of fiction as an autonomous sphere with value in and of itself' and that 'unlike the domestic novelists, Jewett intended her works not as a means to an end but as an end in themselves.' It also says fiction under this view 'was to be viewed in isolation and valued for the formal arrangement of its elements rather than for its larger social connections.' These lines directly describe an effect of Jewett's conception: her fiction is autonomous and valued for form rather than for didactic or social purposes, which is exactly what option D asks.
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