Library/PT 136/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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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

Refer to Passage B's statements about legal writing—identify where the author says legal analysis mutes or strips human narrative—and choose the option that matches that expectation.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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12.

Suppose that a lawyer is writing a legal document describing the facts that are at issue in a case. The author of passage B would be most likely to expect which one of the following to be true of the document?

Correct Answer
D
D is correct because Passage B explicitly states that legal analysis removes the human story from legal forms, so a document can be factually accurate yet fail to convey the human dimension. Support: "Legal writing, because of the purposes it serves, is necessarily ruled by linear logic, creating a path without diversions, surprises, or reversals. Conformity is a virtue, creativity suspect, humor forbidden, and voice mute." and "every case has at its heart a story... But because legal analysis strips the human narrative content from the abstract, canonical legal form of the case, law students learn to act as if there is no such story."
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