Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages say that training in history and law tends to make writing dry and removes real human stories. Historians force students to read formal, abstract books that kill the emotional side of history, and their recent use of the word “narrative” often stays just academic talk rather than true storytelling. Law schools teach a strict, linear style that hides the human story in each case, and talk of adding narrative may change rhetoric more than actual teaching. Still, simply recognizing that stories matter could help make writing in both fields more lively.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the rhetorical function of the A phrase (what role it plays in A's argument: e.g., a concise negative characterization/evidence) and pick the phrase in B that performs that same function.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.The phrase "scholarly monographs that sap the vitality of history" in the middle of the first paragraph of passage A plays a role in that passage's overall argument that is most analogous to the role played in passage B by which one of the following phrases?
Correct Answer
B
In Passage A the phrase 'scholarly monographs that sap the vitality of history' is a pithy, condemnatory characterization that serves as concrete evidence/example of the author's complaint about the historiographic approach: 'The perniciousness of the historiographic approach became fully evident to me when I started teaching. Historians require undergraduates to read scholarly monographs that sap the vitality of history; they visit on students what was visited on them in graduate school.' Likewise, in Passage B the phrase 'Conformity is a virtue, creativity suspect, humor forbidden, and voice mute' is an epigrammatic, critical summary that illustrates and supports the author's claim about how legal writing deadens expression: 'Legal writing, because of the purposes it serves, is necessarily ruled by linear logic... Conformity is a virtue, creativity suspect, humor forbidden, and voice mute.' Both phrases function as brief, pointed characterizations that encapsulate and exemplify the professional problem the author is criticizing, so B is the best analogy.
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