Library/PT 141/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The author says Julia Margaret Cameron’s staged photos of people dressed as biblical or literary characters are charming not because they convincingly imitate great paintings, but because their flaws reveal the real people underneath—the housemaids, relatives, and children struggling to sit still. In photos we can’t forget the sitter is both an actor and a person, so the truth of the awkward sitting comes through more than the story being acted, which gives the pictures life; if they were seamless illustrations, they’d be dull curiosities. Cameron’s best work mixes this homemade, amateur feel with real artistry—like in The Passing of Arthur, where obvious props still create a magical scene, more like the delight of good amateur theater than a failed copy of high art.

Logic Breakdown

Core idea: Cameron's staged photographs are compelling because photography's realism makes viewers aware of the sitters as both characters and real people, creating a distinctive doubleness. The second paragraph uses a contrast about suspension of disbelief to frame this response.
Key supporting quotes:
- "When we look at a narrative painting we can suspend our disbelief; when we look at a narrative photograph we cannot."
- "We are always aware of the photograph's doubleness—of each figure's imaginary and real personas."
- "Still photographs of theatrical scenes can never escape being pictures of actors."
- "It is precisely the camera's realism—its stubborn obsession with the surface of things—that has given Cameron's theatricality and artificiality its atmosphere of truth."
- "It is the truth of the sitting, rather than the fiction which all the dressing up was in aid of, that wafts out of these wonderful and strange... photographs."

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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14.

The discussion of suspension of disbelief in the second paragraph serves which one of the following purposes?

Correct Answer
B
The discussion of suspension of disbelief introduces a contrast—painting allows suspension of disbelief, photography does not—that the author then uses to characterize our peculiar response to Cameron's staged photos. We remain aware of the sitters’ real identities (their "doubleness"), which shapes how we experience the images. Supported by: "When we look at a narrative painting we can suspend our disbelief; when we look at a narrative photograph we cannot" and "We are always aware of the photograph's doubleness—of each figure's imaginary and real personas."
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