Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages debate how to study plagiarism. Ricks (Passage A) criticizes a historian who treats plagiarism, imitation, and originality as the same and says moral judgments are just power plays; he argues plagiarism is about honesty and removing moral concerns from history is wrong. Kewes (Passage B) says the idea of plagiarism has changed over time because of business, artistic theories, and copyright law, so the same acts have sometimes been condemned and sometimes praised; she agrees some historical work is bad but insists studying past views doesn’t mean approving them.
Logic Breakdown
Compare both passages for claims they explicitly endorse; look for language in each passage criticizing certain kinds of historical scholarship (especially phrasing about projecting present-day ideologies onto the past).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.The authors of the two passages would be most likely to agree that
Correct Answer
E
Both authors acknowledge that an inferior sort of historical scholarship projects contemporary ideological concerns onto earlier periods. Passage B explicitly states: 'And it is also true that there has been some shoddy scholarship that anachronistically projects modern-day ideologies having to do with gender, race, or class onto historically remote controversies.' Passage A likewise criticizes a 'postmodern' approach that reduces moral considerations to questions of power and cultural location (e.g., Ricks says such questioning 'invariably leads to the required postmodern answer' and that the author 'writes as if a political approach has to extirpate all moral considerations'). Together these passages support choice E: both authors concede the existence of inferior historical scholarship that inappropriately projects current ideological preoccupations onto the past.
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