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
Ask which excerpt does NOT express the author's evaluative attitude toward Toni Morrison's novel. Scan each quoted line to see whether it praises or analyzes Jazz's narrative/music technique; the exception will be a statement about African American music generally rather than about the novel.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage20.Each of the following excerpts from the passage exhibits the author's attitude toward the novel Jazz EXCEPT:
Correct Answer
A
Choice A is the exception because it speaks about African American music generally, not about Morrison's novel. The passage sentence reads: "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." That sentence describes the tradition's music rather than offering an evaluative remark about Jazz itself; the other choices explicitly evaluate or describe the novel's narrative/music techniques.
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