Library/PT 132/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many experts say that TV shows from rich countries overwhelm and harm local cultures in developing countries. The author argues this claim is mostly an opinion without enough real research: imported shows rarely destroy local TV businesses, they do not always draw bigger audiences, and many viewers actually prefer local programs. A study even found locally made serial dramas are very popular and serve important social roles. The author urges researchers to study real viewers on the ground to see whether foreign shows dominate, are absorbed and enrich local culture, or mix with it, and to remember that people respond differently.

Logic Breakdown

Ask why the author mentions the anthropological study: read the surrounding sentences to see whether the study is presented as evidence supporting or contradicting the specialists' claims.

Passage Stimulus

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17.

The author most likely discusses an anthropological study in the second paragraph primarily in order to

Correct Answer
D
The author uses the study as empirical evidence that contradicts specialists' sweeping claim about cultural imperialism. Support from the passage: 'This is not to deny that dominance is sometimes a risk in relationships between cultures, but rather to say that the assertion lacks empirical foundation and in some cases goes against fact.' The author then gives examples, including: 'For another, imported programs do not uniformly attract larger audiences than domestically produced programs; viewers are not part of a passive, undifferentiated mass but are individuals with personal tastes, and most of them tend to prefer domestically produced television over imported television.' The second paragraph reports the anthropological finding: 'An anthropological study of one community that deals in part with residents' viewing habits where imported programs are available cites the popularity of domestically produced serial dramas and points out that, because viewers enjoy following the dramas from day to day, television in the community can serve an analogous function to that of oral poetry...' Together these passages show the study is cited to contradict the specialists' claim that imported programs automatically dominate domestic ones.
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