Library/PT 136/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage says music and literature have long mixed, especially in African American art, and Toni Morrison’s novel Jazz borrows the form of jazz itself to tell its story. The narrator shifts between an all-knowing voice and characters’ own first-person sections—like a band that lets players solo but keeps them inside the composer’s plan—so the book feels like many voices improvising together but still under control. By doing this, Morrison both copies the way Duke Ellington organized jazz and changes how a novel can use point of view.

Logic Breakdown

Track the movement of ideas in the first paragraph: look for a general claim about arts → application to a particular tradition → a specific work illustrating that application.

Passage Stimulus

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16.

The author's discussion in the first paragraph proceeds in which one of the following ways?

Correct Answer
B
The first paragraph moves from a general remark about music and literature ("Music and literature, rivals among the arts, have not coexisted without intruding on each other's terrain...writing has aspired to the condition of music, in which form contributes significantly to content.") to a comment about a particular tradition ("Nowhere is this truer than in the African American tradition, whose music is often considered its greatest artistic achievement and one of the greatest contributions to North American art.") and then to a specific work that exemplifies the prior remarks ("none had attempted to draw upon a musical genre as the structuring principle for an entire novel until Toni Morrison did so in her 1992 novel Jazz..."). This sequence—general → particular tradition → specific work—matches choice B.
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