Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT129 S4 P3 Q15 Explanation

Willa Cather

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

TopicsAuthor OpinionHumanities

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Passage

The following passages are adapted from critical essays on the American Cather (1873–1947).

Passage A When Cather gave examples of high quality in fiction, she invariably cited Russian writers Ivan Turgenev or Leo Tolstoy or both. Indeed, Edmund Wilson noted in 1922 that Cather followed the manner of Turgenev, not depicting her characters’ emotions directly but telling us how they behave and letting their “inner to avoid overloading the work with unnecessary detail, concentrating instead on what is characteristic and typical.

Here we have an impressionistic aesthetic that anticipates Cather’s: what Turgenev referred to as secret knowledge Cather called “the thing not named.” In one essay she writes that “whatever is felt upon the page without being specifically named there—that, one might say, is created.” For both writers, there is the absolute importance all the elements of narrative for these writers is the establishment of a prevailing mood.

Passage B In a famous 1927 letter, Cather writes of her novel Death Comes for the Archbishop, “Many [reviewers] assert vehemently that it is not a novel. Myself, I prefer to call it a narrative.” Cather’s preference anticipated an important reformulation of the criticism of fiction: the body of literary theory, called which takes as its object “narrative” rather than the “novel,” seems exactly appropriate to Cather’s work.

Indeed, her severest critics have always questioned precisely her capabilities as a novelist. Morton Zabel argued that “[Cather’s] themes...could readily fail to find the structure and substance that might have given them life or redeemed them from the tenuity of a sketch”; Leon Edel called one of her novels “two inconclusive fragments.” “non-novelistic” structures indirectly articulate the essential and conflicting forces of desire at work throughout Cather’s fiction.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

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.

It can be inferred that both authors would be most likely to regard which one of the following as

Answer choices

  1. Trap6% picked this

    A meticulous inventory of the elegant furniture and décor in a character's living room is used to indicate

    Negative Support in B Not About Overlap Given that passage B described her technique as having - a preference for the bold, simple, and stylized in character as well as in landscape .. it seems out of character for her meticulously list all the elegant furniture and decor in a living room. Furthermore, once we get more into these answer choices, we realize the only thing they could be testing is the overlapping idea of direct vs. indirect psychological characterization, and this answer choice has nothing to do with that.

  2. No Support5% picked this

    An account of a character's emotional scars is used to explain the negative effects the character

    Once we start seeing that every answer choice structured in the form of "X is used to suggest Y", we have to really start re-evaluating what we think we're looking for, because nothing in B's list of ... - unusual treatment of narrative time - unexpected focus - ambiguous conclusions, - a preference for the bold, simple, and stylized in character as well as in landscape ... would give us any way to support the idea that "X is used to suggest Y". Ultimately what's being tested is the overlap between psg A and B: they both mention that narratologists like Cather would avoid direct psychological characterization. So what does indirect psychological characterization mean? It means that we learn about people's psychology, their mental lives, without direct access to their thoughts. Thus, this answer's notion that the author provides an account of a character's emotional scars would mean that we have access to this character's tortured memories. That is direct, not indirect, psychological characterization.

  3. Correct82% picked this

    A description of a slightly quivering drink in the hand of a character at a dinner party is used to suggest

    Why this is right

    This qualifies as indirect psychological characterization. She's not telling us the character is timid. She's telling us how this character behaves (quivering hand) and letting their inner blaze of [timidity] shine through. In passage B, it not only reinforces the idea that narratologists didn't mess around with direct psychological characterization, but it probably also qualifies as "unexpected focus", to zoom in on a description of a slightly quivering drink.

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

  4. Opposite2% picked this

    A chronological summary of the events that spark a family conflict is used to supply the context for an

    This is too linear and straightforward. This sounds like the "causal plotting" of novelists, like their "realistic treatment of time" (chronological summary). Cather is trying to avoid those conventions.

  5. No Match5% picked this

    A detailed narration of an unprovoked act of violence and the reprisals it triggers is used to portray the

    This isn't quite contradicted, but it certainly seems to feel more like a traditional novel. It's got a story, told with realistic treatment of time and causal-plotting (violence triggers reprisals), all under the umbrella of some clear thematic takeaway. Cather is more experimental. She's supposed to have weird fragmented pacing / unclear takeaways (strays from "logical closure / unambiguous conclusions").

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