Library/PT 154/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Great Zimbabwe was a large walled city in southern Africa (900s–1500s). Although many say its wealth came from controlling gold, the passage shows that a cattle-based economy was the real foundation: moving herds seasonally across distant pastures required strong, centralized control, so rulers owned the cattle and gave them to people as favors. Those cattle ties reached into marriage and daily life, gave rulers power over the population, and let them recruit laborers for dangerous, large-scale gold mining—so the cattle system made both the big city and the gold industry possible.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: identify the author's evaluative language about the cattle economy by locating explicit descriptions of its functions and social integration. Supporting quotations: "the alternative agricultural system ... was a complex cattle economy"; "This economy demanded large-scale coordinated efforts ... This favored a pattern of centralized control"; "Ordinary people were given use of individual cattle as an act of royal patronage"; "cattle exchange was an essential element in marriage contracts"; "it was through its use of cattle as a powerful incentive to laborers that royalty was able to muster the human resources necessary for large-scale gold mining."

Passage Stimulus

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4.

Which one of the following most accurately describes the author's attitude regarding Great Zimbabwe's cattle economy?

Correct Answer
E
The author presents the cattle economy as multifaceted and deeply woven into economic, social, and political life. He explicitly calls it "a complex cattle economy," describes how it "demanded large-scale coordinated efforts" and thus "favored a pattern of centralized control," notes cattle were granted as royal patronage and that "cattle exchange was an essential element in marriage contracts," and shows cattle enabled large-scale mining by providing labor incentives. The tone is appreciative and analytical rather than condemnatory or skeptical, so choice E (appreciation of its complexity and extensive integration) best captures the author's attitude.
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