Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT132 S1 P4 Q23 Explanation

Sarah Orne Jewett

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

TopicsAuthor OpinionHumanities

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Passage

Recent criticism has sought to align Sarah Orne Jewett, a notable writer of regional fiction in the nineteenth-century United States, with the domestic novelists of the previous generation. Her work does resemble the domestic novels of the 1850s in its focus on women, their domestic occupations, and their social interactions, with men belief, to turn from these writers to Jewett is to encounter an almost wholly secular world.

To the extent that these differences do not merely reflect the personal preferences of the authors, we might attribute them to such historical transformations as the migration of the rural young to cities or the increasing secularization of society. But while such factors may help to explain the differences, it can be late nineteenth-century “high-cultural” conception of fiction as an autonomous sphere with value in and of itself.

This high-cultural aesthetic was one among several conceptions of fiction operative in the United States in the 1850s and 1860s, but it became the dominant one later in the nineteenth century and remained so for most of the twentieth. On this conception, fiction came to be seen as pure art: a work should be given more weight in assessing their affinities than any superficial similarity in subject matter.

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
23.

It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to view the “recent criticism” mentioned

Answer choices

  1. Contradicted: essentially correct3% picked this

    advocating a position that is essentially correct even though some powerful arguments can be

    We want something more like, "although there are some superficial similarities, this position is essentially incorrect". The author's entire passage is written to reject the view of this recent criticism.

  2. Opposite: true claim4% picked this

    making a true claim about Jewett, but for the

    Again, like (A), we should be wanting an answer that is primarily about disagreeing with the recent criticism, since the author wrote this passage to Challenge that Position. Their "claim" would be that Jewett is aligned with the domestic novelists of the previous generation, and our author definitely does not think that this is a true claim. Jewett's stuff doesn't care about children, doesn't care about religion, isn't trying to teach stuff, and is based on a new concept of fiction as art for art's sake.

  3. Correct78% picked this

    making a claim that is based on some reasonable evidence and is initially plausible

    Why this is right

    This starts with the soft concession of the 2nd sentence of the passage: Her work does resemble the domestic novels in its focus on women, their domestic occupations, and their social interactions, with men relegated to the periphery. That matches "a claim based on some reasonable evidence / initially plausible". But then the rest of the passage is arguing that this idea that Jewett was writing domestic novels like those of the previous generation is ultimately mistaken.

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

  4. Too Weak11% picked this

    questionable, because it relies on a currently dominant literary aesthetic that takes too narrow a view of the

    Too Weak: questionable Out of Scope: current dominant aesthetic The author would go farther than "this view is questionable". She wrote this whole passage to refute the view, so she would say the view is wrong. And we have no support for the notion that the recent criticism "relies on a currently dominant literary aesthetic".

  5. Too Strong: no reasonable support4% picked this

    based on speculation for which there is no reasonable support, and therefore

    Our author is definitely here to rebut this recent criticism, but "dismissal" is too strong and insulting. It's more like a wave of the hand rejection, rather than our author's scholarly takedown. And the 2nd sentence contradicts the idea that it's "based on speculation for which there is no reasonable support".

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