Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Borges says detective stories create a special kind of reader who reads with suspicion, and he argues that literature depends on the reader’s active role—so genres are about how people read texts, not just fixed features inside them. The second passage agrees that grouping books by theme causes messy borderline cases, and recommends thinking of genres as 'reading protocols'—specific ways of reading and what readers pay attention to. The books most central to a genre are those written to be read that way, so critics should study the writing tricks (for example, sound in poetry or the different world-rules in science fiction) that shape those readings.
Logic Breakdown
Locate Passage B's statements about 'reading protocols' and 'borderline cases' — the author links central genre status to texts 'written to exploit' a protocol, so pick the choice that says works not written to exploit a protocol can be borderline cases.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.The author of passage B would be most likely to agree with which one of the following?
Correct Answer
A
Passage B states, "The problem of 'borderline cases'—especially in science fiction—arises so often that the definition fails to demarcate genres entirely." It also says, "But the texts most central to a genre are those texts that were clearly written to exploit a particular protocol—texts that yield a particularly rich reading experience when read according to one protocol rather than another." These lines imply that works not written to exploit a genre's reading protocol can be 'borderline cases,' which directly supports choice A.
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