Library/PT 145/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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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: Determine what the passage means by a 'transnational' perspective for black historians—look for emphasis on linking African Americans to Africa and reconstructing a shared diasporic culture. Supporting passage lines: 'they contributed to the formation of a collective identity, reconstructing a glorious African past for the purposes of overturning degrading representations of blackness and establishing a firm cultural basis for a shared identity.' and 'a diasporic community... possesses a single culture... Many members of this diaspora saw themselves as an oppressed 'nation' without a homeland, or they imagined Africa as home.' Choose the answer that studies ties between African American culture and multiple African cultures.

Passage Stimulus

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23.

As it is described in the passage, the transnational approach employed by African American historians working in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries would be best exemplified by a historical study that

Correct Answer
E
E is correct because the passage describes black historians' transnationalism as reconstructing African origins and emphasizing a diasporic community with a shared culture. A study that 'examined the extent to which African American culture at the turn of the century incorporated traditions that were common to a number of African cultures' directly exemplifies linking African American history and culture to African roots and diasporic continuity, which is exactly the transnational approach the passage attributes to these historians. (See the passage's statements about 'reconstructing a glorious African past' and treating the diaspora as possessing 'a single culture.')
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