Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT102 S1 P3 Q15 Explanation

Intertribalism's Effects

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TopicsLocal PurposeSociety

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Passage

Even in the midst of its resurgence as a vital tradition, many sociologists have viewed the current form of the powwow, a ceremonial gathering of native Americans, as a sign that tribal culture is in decline. Focusing on the dances and rituals that have recently come to be shared by most tribes, increasing politicization in response to common grievances as the chief causes of the shift toward intertribalism.

Indeed, the rapid diffusion of dance styles, outfits, and songs from one reservation to another offers compelling evidence that intertribalism has been increasing. However, these sociologists have failed to note the concurrent revitalization of many traditions unique to individual tribes. Among the Lakota, for instance, the Sun Dance was revived, after a more complex societal shift is taking place than the theory of Pan-Indianism can account for.

An examination of the theory’s underpinnings may be critical at this point, especially given that native Americans themselves chafe most against the Pan-Indian classification. Like other assimilationist theories with which it is associated, the Pan-Indian view is predicated upon an a priori assumption about the nature of cultural contact: that upon contact there is no evidence that this is happening to native American groups.

Yet the fact remains that intertribal activities are a major facet of native American culture today. Certain dances at powwows, for instance, are announced as intertribal, other as traditional. Likewise, speeches given at the beginnings of powwows are often delivered in English, while the prayer that follows is usually spoken in a is the conscious distinction native Americans make between tribal and intertribal tendencies.

Tribalism, although greatly altered by modern history, remains a potent force among native Americans: It forms a basis for tribal identity, and aligns music and dance with other social and cultural activities important to individual tribes. Intertribal activities, on the other hand, reinforce this identity is directly threatened by outside influences.

What this question is testing

Local Purpose

Your task

Identify why the author included the referenced detail at that point in the passage — its function, not its content.

Common trap

Answers that merely repeat or summarize the topic of the detail instead of describing the role it plays.

Winning move

Ask what job the detail does for the paragraph, then for the passage's broader point.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
15.

The author most likely states that “cultural borrowing is, of course, old news” (lines

Answer choices

  1. Correct73% picked this

    acknowledge that in itself the existence of intertribal tendencies at powwows

    Why this is right

    This best captures the idea of "old news" -- this has been going on for a while / this isn't indicative of a new, alarming trend of assimilation, so you can relax, Pan-Indian theorists.

    Skill tested: Local Purpose · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  2. Too Strong: unavoidable8% picked this

    suggest that native Americans’ use of English in powwows should be

    The author is suggesting that the use of English is uncontroversial / it doesn't mean that native Americans are losing their tribal identity and succumbing to assimilation into the majority culture. But it's too strong to say she thinks it's unavoidable.

  3. Too Specific14% picked this

    argue that the deliberate distinction of intertribal and traditional dances is not

    This is pretty temptingly close to what we want, but it gets a little too specific. And if this answer were correct, then it would imply that (A) is also correct (any time one answer would imply a 2nd answer is also correct, then the first answer is wrong). The author is saying that multiculturalism / intertribalism is not a recent development. It's old news. But she isn't necessarily saying that deliberate distinction of dances has been going on for a long time. The 4th paragraph starts off with sentences that seem to describe the current state of affairs: "intertribalism is a major facet today. Certain dances, for instance, are announced as intertribal, other as traditional." The idea of distinguishing dances is discussed as an example of today's intertribalism.

  4. Unsupported Causal Relationship3% picked this

    suggest that the recent increase in intertribal activity is the result of native Americans borrowing

    The author's main goal is to argue against the theory that the rise in intertribalism signifies that native Americans are losing their specific tribal identities. The author isn't really concerned with proving where the uptick in intertribalism came from. But to the extent that she does provide a reason, it comes in the final paragraph. She suggests that a rise in intertribalism is the result of being directly threatened by outside influences (non-native American). So we could argue that the author thinks that intertribalism is the result of pressures from outside the native American world, which leads to them bonding more over their shared, intertribal identity. But we could also just say that, "Cultural borrowing is old news" is definitely not a sentence that indicates a specific causal relationship between the recent uptick in intertribalism and whatever supposedly caused it.

  5. Out of Scope2% picked this

    indicate that the powwow itself could have originated by combining practices drawn from both native

    Out of Scope: origin story of powwow The author is definitely never speculating on how the powwow was originally invented.

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