Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
In Dostoyevsky's time critics fell into two groups: some thought art should be above everyday life, while radicals said art must show real social problems and be useful. Dostoyevsky disagreed with both. He said literature should come from reality but that reality also includes imagination and each person’s inner experience, so writers should mix the ordinary with the fantastic. He argued that art should be judged by how well it expresses the author’s ideas, not by whether it serves a political purpose, because usefulness is hard to predict.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the passage's overall claim about Dostoyevsky's stance relative to the two critical camps; focus on the explicit contrasts the passage draws (nature of reality, role of artistic/formal aspects, and the usefulness of art).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage20.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
E
Choice E is correct because the passage's main point is that Dostoyevsky's position differed sharply from the radical critics in three explicit ways: the nature of reality, the importance of formal/artistic aspects, and the utility of art. Support from the passage includes: "As a realist, he never doubted that reality was literature's crucial source... there was no distinction in principle between fantasy and reality, and reality was far more than the merely tangible." On form the passage states that "A literary work must stand or fall on its \"artistic merit,\" he explained" and that treating formal aspects as secondary "struck Dostoyevsky as a contradiction in terms." On usefulness the passage says, "The radical critics' requirement that art must at all costs be \"useful\" to people and society seemed to Dostoyevsky unsatisfactory." Option E succinctly restates these three contrasts and thus captures the passage's main point.
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