Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
At the turn of the 20th century, most U.S. historians focused on the nation, but African American historians like George Washington Williams and W. E. B. DuBois looked beyond U.S. borders. Because Black citizenship remained insecure even after the 14th Amendment, many Black people debated emigrating, so writers had to study links to Africa and the wider diaspora. These historians also reconstructed a proud African past to push back against racist views and to create a shared identity for people of African descent — treating the scattered diaspora like a kind of nation without a homeland.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Find the passage's central claim by synthesizing three points the passage repeatedly links: (1) African American historians 'adopted a transnational perspective,' (2) this perspective is contrasted with mainstream historiography that 'was firmly rooted in a nationalist approach,' and (3) the passage qualifies that black historians' internationalism also involved 'a sort of nation building' that reconstructed a diasporic identity. Supporting sentences: 'In contrast to the mainstream of U.S. historiography ... African American historians ... adopted a transnational perspective.'; 'Mainstream U.S. historiography was firmly rooted in a nationalist approach during this period ...' ; 'Yet, for all their distrust of U.S. nationalism, most early black historians were themselves engaged in a sort of nation building ... reconstructing a glorious African past ...'.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage20.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main idea of the passage?
Correct Answer
D
D best captures the passage's main idea because it states both halves the passage emphasizes: black historians' transnational perspective countered mainstream nationalist historiography, and that transnationalism itself functioned as a form of diasporic nationalism. The opening sentence establishes the transnational approach; a middle paragraph describes mainstream historiography as nationalist; the final paragraph explains that black historians nonetheless engaged in 'a sort of nation building' and 'reconstructing a glorious African past.' D synthesizes these points accurately.
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