Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Lorenzo Tucker was an important but little-known African American entertainer who worked on stage and in films from 1926 to 1986 and collected many theater items. The author researched him using library archives, the ten surviving films he appeared in, interviews with colleagues, and long interviews with Tucker in 1985–86. Because people can misremember, the author checked Tucker’s memories against records and only kept personal details that mattered for his career. The study combines these checked interviews and documents to tell Tucker’s career story.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the author's statements about oral testimony (must be approached with caution and verified) and apply that standard to the physicist's memoir.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage3.Suppose that a well-known nuclear physicist has written and published a book consisting of that physicist's own recollections of the events surrounding some important scientific discoveries. It can be inferred that the author of the passage would be most likely to view the physicist's book as
Correct Answer
A
The author emphasizes caution with firsthand recollections: "this testimony must be approached with caution," "people often remember the events they want to remember in the version they prefer," and "it is the duty of the biographer, therefore, to verify as much of the oral narrative as possible." The author also notes that Tucker's information "has undergone careful scrutiny." Given this stance, she would most likely view a scientist's memoir as being at considerable risk of misrepresenting some historical facts unless independently verified.
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