Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Katherine Dunham, trained as both an anthropologist and a dancer, learned a technique called dance-isolation (moving one body part to a different rhythm) from African and Caribbean traditions and brought it into modern North American dance. In the 1930s she studied these dances up close—often joining them rather than just watching—which let her truly learn and teach the movements. Between 1937 and 1945 she mixed those traditional steps with modern dance to create ballets that brought African American themes into mainstream modern dance and helped establish African American dance as a respected art form.
Logic Breakdown
Relevant passage sentences that support D: Dunham's success in bringing dance-isolation and other traditional techniques from those cultures into the mainstream of modern North American dance is due in no small part to her training in both anthropological research and choreography. Starting in 1935, Dunham conducted a series of research projects into traditional Caribbean dance forms, with special interest in their origins in African culture. Colleagues in anthropology advised her not to become too closely involved in the dances she was observing, but because of her interest and her skill as a performer, she generally eschewed such caution and participated in the dances herself. Through prolonged immersion of this kind, Dunham was able not only to comprehend various dances as complex cultural practices, but also to learn the techniques well enough to teach them to others and incorporate them into new forms of ballet. Between 1937 and 1945, Dunham developed a research-to-performance method that she used to adapt Caribbean dance forms for use in theatrical performance, combining them with modern dance styles she learned in Chicago. These lines show that Dunham combined social-science training and practical artistic skill, conducted field research by working with practitioners in other cultures, and then adapted and introduced those practices into her own country's mainstream performance.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.Which one of the following is most analogous to Dunham's work in anthropology and choreography as that work is described in the passage?
Correct Answer
D
D parallels Dunham: a professional with social-science training conducts field research while working with practitioners in other countries, selects effective procedures, and then introduces those procedures into his own country's practice. Like Dunham, the teacher both researches and directly adapts/teaches foreign practices in his home country.
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