Library/PT 137/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Shostak's book combines three things: Nisa's personal life story, Nisa's tale as an example of women's experience in general, and the meeting between Nisa and the researcher. It argues against the idea that the !Kung lead an easy, happy life by showing hard facts—many children die young, people lose loved ones, and family life can be difficult—and it makes clear the book is a joint creation where Shostak shapes Nisa's messy memories into a readable life.

Logic Breakdown

Read the sentences immediately before and after the quotation: the author explicitly uses that line as an example of how life accounts lack coherent narrative shape. Choose the answer that captures that function.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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14.

It can be inferred that the author of the passage believes that the quotation near the end of the final paragraph best exemplifies which one of the following?

Correct Answer
B
The author directly frames the quotation as an example of unshaped life-narratives: 'Real lives, in fact, do not easily arrange themselves as stories that have recognizable shapes: Nisa, for example, often says 'We lived in that place, eating things. Then we left and went somewhere else.'' He then explains that 'a shaped story emerges from this seemingly featureless background.' Together these sentences show the quotation exemplifies the amorphous, episodic nature of the accounts people give of their lives.
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