Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Ezekiel Mphahlele’s books confuse critics who insist on labeling them strictly as autobiography or fiction: his memoir seems too fictional and his novel seems too autobiographical. Critics who focus on labels miss the point — Mphahlele uses real-life details and invented scenes alike to push a social message. He is more interested in promoting a humanist, integrationist vision than in giving political plans, and he argues that all serious writing mixes fact and imagination to communicate important ideas, so strict genre categories don’t matter.
Logic Breakdown
Locate Mphahlele's explicit statements about the purpose of writing (especially the final paragraph) and match that stated purpose to the answer choices.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage2.The passage states that Mphahlele believes which one of the following?
Correct Answer
B
The passage explicitly states that "the whole point of the exercise of writing has nothing to do with classification; in all forms writing is the transmission of ideas, and important ideas at that" and quotes Mphahlele: "Whenever you write prose or poetry or drama you are writing a social criticism of one kind or another. If you don't, you are completely irrelevant—you don't count." The passage also says he "manipulates different prose forms purely in the service of the social message he advances." Together these lines show he believes writing should have as its goal the transmission of ideas (social criticism).
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