Library/PT 134/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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

Focus on Dostoyevsky's relation between artistic merit and political usefulness: find where he rejects the radicals' utilitarian demand and insists that only fully realized/artistic works (i.e., well written) can fulfill goals.

Passage Stimulus

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26.

Given the information in the passage, Dostoyevsky would have been most likely to agree with which one of the following statements about works of literature?

Correct Answer
A
The passage explicitly links a work's ability to achieve goals (including political aims) to its artistic quality. Supporting sentences: Dostoyevsky says that 'A literary work must stand or fall on its "artistic merit,"' and that 'Only fully realized artistic works could fulfill their goals.' He also defines artistry as 'the ability to write well.' Together these statements show he believes formal/artistic quality (being well written) is necessary for a work to serve a particular political view, which matches choice A.
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