Library/PT 147/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Mali made a law to stop people from digging up and exporting terra-cotta statues from Djenne-jeno, but it couldn’t enforce the law, so looters took many figures in the 1980s and valuable archaeological information was lost. UNESCO and many countries say artifacts belong to the culture where they were made and often ban export, which sounds right, but strict bans can backfire because people may hide or sell finds without recording where they came from (recorded items can be seized). The author suggests that if Mali had worked with UNESCO to license digs, teach locals to record finds, require registration before objects left sites, and tax exports to buy museum pieces, this imperfect system would probably have saved more objects and information than what actually happened.

Logic Breakdown

Scan for explicit statements about foreign collectors; the phrase 'sold to foreign collectors who rightly admired them' signals the author's attitude toward their aesthetic judgment.

Passage Stimulus

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13.

Which one of the following is an element of the author's attitude toward foreign collectors of terra-cotta sculptures from Djenne-jeno?

Correct Answer
B
The passage states that many sculptures were 'sold to foreign collectors who rightly admired them.' That explicit phrase indicates the author approves of the collectors' aesthetic judgment—he acknowledges their admiration for the works—even though he condemns the pillaging that removed the objects from archaeological context.
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