Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT126 S2 P3 Q20 Explanation

Chinese Talk-story

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

TopicsLocal PurposeHumanities

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Passage

With their recognition of Maxine Hong Kingston as a major literary figure, some critics have suggested that her works have been produced almost ex nihilo, saying that they lack a large traceable body of direct literary antecedents especially within the Chinese American heritage in which her work is embedded. But these critics, a highly developed genre of song and spoken narrative known as "talk-story" (gong gu tsai).

Traditionally performed in the dialects of various ethnic enclaves, talk-story has been maintained within the confines of the family and has rarely surfaced into print. The tradition dates back to Sung dynasty (A.D. 970-1279) storytellers in China, and in the United States it is continually revitalized by an overlapping sequence of immigration or new forms of Western discourse, as in the case of Kingston's adaptations written in English.

Kingston herself believes that as a literary artist she is one in a long line of performers shaping a recalcitrant history into talk-story form. She distinguishes her "thematic" storytelling memory processes, which sift and reconstruct the essential elements of “personally remembered stories”, from the memory processes of a print-oriented culture that emphasizes be frozen in print, but which continue to grow both around and from that frozen text.

Kingston's participation in the tradition of talk-story is evidenced in her book China Men, which utilizes forms typical of that genre and common to most oral cultures including: a fixed "grammar" of repetitive themes; a spectrum of stock characters; symmetrical structures, including balanced oppositions (verbal or physical contests, antithetical characters, dialectical discourse language rich in aural and visual puns, making her work a written form of talk-story.

What this question is testing

Local Purpose

Topic

The author is pushing back on critics who said Maxine Hong Kingston's books seemed to come out of nowhere — and arguing that she actually has very deep roots in a Chinese storytelling tradition.

Framework

Highlight Noteworthy. The author opens with a wrong view to set up against, then walks through what those critics missed.

Main Point

Here's the simpler version: some critics looked at Kingston, didn't find any obvious written predecessors, and said she came out of nothing. The author's point is that they were looking in the wrong place — Kingston's work belongs to a long tradition called "talk-story," which is mostly oral, so it doesn't leave a paper trail. Once you know to look for it, you can see talk-story all over her writing.

P1: The critics missed something

Critics said Kingston's work was almost without antecedents. The author says they only checked the written record, which misses oral traditions like talk-story.

P2: What talk-story is

It's an old, living oral tradition — going back to Sung dynasty China — passed down within families in dialect and rarely printed. Kingston's English-language work is one branch of that tradition.

P3: How Kingston thinks of herself

She sees herself as a performer in a long line, not as a print author. She isn't trying to remember exact words; she's rebuilding the essentials of stories. For her, "writer" means "singer" — print just freezes one stage of a story that keeps growing.

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

The question
20.

The author’s specific purpose in detailing typical talk-story forms (last paragraph)

Answer choices

  1. Term Shift2% picked this

    show why Kingston's book China Men establishes her as a major

    The author’s purpose is to establish Kingston as within the tradition of talk-story. That she is a major literary figure is conceded by her critics in the first paragraph.

  2. Correct90% picked this

    support the claim that Kingston's use of typically oral techniques makes her work a part

    Why this is right

    The purpose of the fourth paragraph is to establish that Kingston belongs within the tradition of talk-story (see passage map).

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

  3. Too Broad6% picked this

    dispute the critics' view that Chinese American literature lacks

    The critics view is that Kingston’s work lacks literary precedent, while this is about Chinese American literature.

  4. Wrong Role1% picked this

    argue for Kingston's view that the literary artist is at best a "privileged

    The author connects Kingston with the tradition of talk-story in the fourth paragraph, while in the previous paragraph the author provides Kingston’s view on the role of writers.

  5. Too Strong2% picked this

    provide an alternative to certain critics' view that Kingston's work should be judged

    While her critics recognize her as major literary figure without precedent (first paragraph), the passage does not indicate whether most literary critics believe it as well.

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