Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Cheap video cameras let many indigenous people make their own films, and anthropologists disagree about what that means. Critics like James Weiner say video spreads Western ways of seeing and can wipe out real cultural differences, harming native identity. Supporters like Faye Ginsburg argue that using Western media doesn’t force people to become Western and can help preserve languages and traditions. Fieldwork with the Kayapo supports Ginsburg: their videos follow Kayapo styles and are used for ceremonies and legal records, so cameras don’t automatically turn them into Westerners.
Logic Breakdown
Quick approach: identify the passage's main point by noting the debate—Weiner's claim that video imposes a Western ontology versus Ginsburg/Turner's counterclaim that indigenous peoples can use video to preserve culture—and choose the answer that captures both the divided reaction and evidence for compatibility.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following most accurately and completely summarizes the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Option C is correct because it captures both central features of the passage: (1) anthropologists are divided about the effects of video and (2) there is evidence that video can be compatible with preserving indigenous cultures. Supporting quotations: "Reaction to this phenomenon within Western anthropological circles is sharply divided." (first paragraph). Weiner's view: "He believes that video technologies inevitably purvey a Western ontology, one based on realism, immediacy, and self-expression." (second paragraph). Ginsburg's counter: "Ginsburg maintains that non-Western indigenous peoples can use Western media without adopting the conventions of Western culture" and "video affords societies—especially oral ones—an invaluable opportunity to strengthen native languages and traditions threatened by Western exposure." (third paragraph). Turner's evidence: his Brazilian fieldwork "lends credence to Ginsburg's position" and "The videos aesthetically mirror the ceremonies. The camera is not so at odds with Kayapo culture, it seems, that it transforms any Kayapo who uses it into a Westerner." (fourth paragraph). Because C mentions both the scholarly division and the evidence that video technology is compatible with cultural preservation, it most accurately and completely summarizes the passage.
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