Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT125 S1 P3 Q15 Explanation

Aida Overton Walker

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsAnalogyHumanities

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Passage

Aida Overton Walker (1880-1914), one of the most widely acclaimed African American performers of the early twentieth century, was known largely for popularizing a dance form known as the cakewalk through her choreographing, performance, and teaching of the dance. The cakewalk was originally developed prior to the United States Civil War by retained features characteristic of African dance forms, such as gliding steps and an emphasis on improvisation.

To this African-derived foundation, the cakewalk added certain elements from European dances: where African dances feature flexible body postures, large groups and separate-sex dancing, the cakewalk developed into a high-kicking walk performed by a procession of couples. Ironically, while these modifications later enabled the cakewalk to appeal to European Americans and become European American stage performers, and these parodies in turn helped shape subsequent versions of the cakewalk.

While this complex evolution meant that the cakewalk was not a simple cultural phenomenon—one scholar has characterized this layering of parody upon parody with the phrase "mimetic vertigo"—it is in fact what enabled the dance to attract its wide audience. In the cultural and socioeconomic flux of the turn-of-the-century United States, where many things to many people in order to appeal to a large audience.

Walker's remarkable success at popularizing the cakewalk across otherwise relatively rigid racial boundaries rested on her ability to address within her interpretation of it the varying and sometimes conflicting demands placed on the dance. Middle-class African Americans, for example, often denounced the cakewalk as disreputable, a complaint reinforced by the parodies circulating flourishes of her version of the cakewalk a fitting vehicle for celebrating their newfound social rank.

What this question is testing

Analogy

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

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.

Which one of the following is most analogous to the author’s account in the second paragraph of how the cakewalk came to

Answer choices

  1. Weak Match7% picked this

    Satirical versions of popular music songs are frequently more popular than the

    The cakewalk had a satiric dimension to it, but it wasn't satirizing a different dance. In order to match this answer up, we'd have to think, "European Americans didn't like the original cakewalk. But once a satirical version of it came out, that one was more popular with the EA's." The original version of the cakewalk had satiric elements; there isn't an original version that got parodied.

  2. Wrong Relationship10% picked this

    A style of popular music grows in popularity among young listeners because it parodies the musical styles

    To make this answer more appealing, we would want the group being parodied (the European Americans) to match the group with whom the new thing becomes popular. i.e. if this answer said, "A style of of popular music that parodies the musical styles admired by older listeners grows in popularity among older listeners", then it would be a decent match.

  3. Correct74% picked this

    A style of music becomes admired among popular music's audience in part because of elements that were introduced in

    Why this is right

    This has the desired feel of "the joke backfired". There is a style of music that has elements that parody popular music (just as the cakewalk had elements that parodied Euro-Americans). And this style becomes popular with the group being parodied because of those elements (just as the cakewalk became popular with Euro-Americans because of the elements of a high-kicking walk performed by a profession of couples).

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

  4. Bad Match4% picked this

    A once popular style of music wins back its audience by incorporating elements of the style of music

    New vs. old isn't really a relevant distinction for the cakewalk becoming popular with Euro-Americans. "The group being parodied is the group that's loving it" is the logical relationship we want. We could say that incorporating elements of Euro-American dance might match up okay with incorporating elements of the style currently most popular. But we couldn't call this a case in which a "once popular style of music was winning back its audience". We don't have any reason to think that African dance was once-popular with Euro-Americans and that the cakewalk was allowing African dance to win back that old audience.

  5. Reversed5% picked this

    After popular music begins to appropriate elements of a traditional style of music, interest in

    The cakewalk started with a traditional African style of dance, but then appropriated (for the sake of parody) elements from contemporary Euro-American dance. So to match, this answer would need to start: after a traditional style of music begins to appropriate elements of a popular style of music

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