Library/PT 133/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Kate Chopin’s writing changed as she grew up: she started with the old romantic novels focused on marriage, then learned from “local color” writers who described places and people in a calm, detailed way and used that plain tone to tell sad, lonely stories without getting overly dramatic. By the 1890s she moved to the more modern “New Women” writers and adopted a looser, dreamlike style that shows a woman’s inner thoughts—an approach she uses in The Awakening.

Logic Breakdown

Locate where the passage describes the local colorists' idealization of 'women's culture' and where it states Chopin's attitude toward that nostalgia; choose the option that reflects Chopin's rejection of their idealization.

Passage Stimulus

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9.

With which one of the following statements about the local colorists would Chopin have been most likely to agree?

Correct Answer
A
"the local colorists began to mourn its demise by investing its images with mythic significance. In their stories, the garden became a paradisal sanctuary; the house became an emblem of female nurturing; and the artifacts of domesticity became virtual totemic objects." and "Chopin did not share the local colorists' growing nostalgia for the past, however" — these sentences show the local colorists idealized settings and objects associated with 'women's culture,' and the passage explicitly says Chopin did not share that nostalgia; thus she would view their idealization as misguided.
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