Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT125 S3 P2 Q10 Explanation

Roy Lichtenstein

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

TopicsLocal PurposeHumanities

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Passage

The painter Roy Lichtenstein helped to define pop art—the movement that incorporated commonplace objects and commercial-art techniques into paintings—by paraphrasing the style of comic books in his work. His merger of a popular genre with the forms and intentions of fine art generated a complex result: while poking fun at the pretensions a seriousness of theme that enabled it to transcend mere parody.

That Lichtenstein’s images were fine art was at first difficult to see, because, with their word balloons and highly stylized figures, they looked like nothing more than the comic book panels from which they were copied. Standard art history holds that pop art emerged as an impersonal alternative to the histrionics of against the fading emotional power of abstract expressionism, rather than an aloof attempt to ignore it.

But if rebellion against previous art by means of the careful imitation of a popular genre were all that characterized Lichtenstein’s work, it would possess only the reflective power that parodies have in relation to their subjects. Beneath its cartoonish methods, his work displayed an impulse toward realism, an urge to say faith in reconciliation, not only between cartoons and fine art, but between parody and true feeling.

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
10.

The author most likely lists some of the themes and objects influencing and appearing in Lichtenstein’s paintings (third

Answer choices

  1. Correct87% picked this

    show that the paintings depict aspects of

    Why this is right

    This matches the broader framing idea right before the Detail, which is the secret to most correct answers on Local Purpose. The previous sentence is saying, "His work displayed an ... urge to say that was was missing from contemporary painting was the depiction of contemporary life." And so the author then listed examples of Lichenstein depicting contemporary life.

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

  2. Wrong Purpose2% picked this

    support the claim that Lichtenstein’s work was parodic

    The beginning of this paragraph is saying, "If his work were merely doing parody it would only have reflective power (not a power of its own. But it's not just doing parody.) Beneath the cartoonish methods is an impulse toward realism, an urge to depict contemporary life". The author isn't listing the pop culture examples to show that Lichtenstein was doing parody. She's trying to stress the point that he did realism, with an urge to depict contemporary life.

  3. Wrong Purpose5% picked this

    contrast Lichtenstein’s approach to art with that of

    In a sense, anything we hear about Lichtenstein's work will serve to contrast his approach to that of abstract expressionism (since we know he was rebelling against late abstract expressionism, and thus wouldn't be trying to copy it. But there's nothing in the 3rd paragraph to suggest that the author's Local Purpose in mentioning the highlighted text was to contrasts with abstract expressionism. The 3rd paragraph never even mentions expressionism. The author's goal is to tell us what Lichtenstein was for. Those things will contrast with expressionism, but when we look at the two sentences leading up to the highlighted details, we can see that the author's local purpose is to emphasize how Lichtenstein's vision of art included a desire to depict contemporary life.

  4. Unconnected to Detail: emotions3% picked this

    suggest the emotions that lie at the heart of

    While the end of the 3rd paragraph talks about the emotional content of Lichtenstein's work, the listed details are examples of his urge to depict contemporary life, to reflect the culture he inhabited.

  5. Out of Scope: endorse2% picked this

    endorse Lichtenstein’s attitude toward consumer

    The author never adds her own voice to this description by saying, "He was right to have these thoughts about consumer culture". The author is just describing Lichtenstein's art and aesthetic goals without editorializing whether they were right or wrong.

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