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

Focus on explicit lines describing the analogy between Morrison's narrative and jazz; check whether the passage treats the analogy as involving framing/structure (quotation marks, narrator's control, ensemble vs. solos) rather than merely shifts in narrative person.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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21.

It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to believe which one of the following?

Correct Answer
D
D is supported because the passage repeatedly treats the analogy as involving narrative framing and structural features in addition to shifts in person. Relevant lines: "The narration slips easily from the third-person omniscience of the narrator's disembodied voice ... to the first-person lyricism of key characters." Also: "their sections are set off by quotation marks, reminders that the narrator is allowing them to speak." The Ellington comparison makes the framing explicit: "they always performed within the undeniable logic of the composer's frame—they always, in other words, performed as if with quotation marks around their improvisations and solos." And the passage concludes: "Morrison has found a way, paradoxically, to create the sense of an ensemble of characters improvising within the fixed scope of a carefully constructed collective narration." These statements show the analogy involves the narrator's framing and structural devices, not merely a shift between first- and third-person narration.
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