Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT132 S1 P4 Q26 Explanation

Sarah Orne Jewett

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

TopicsOrganizationHumanities

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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

Organization

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
26.

Which one of the following most accurately represents the structure of the

Answer choices

  1. Contradicted: rejects all explanations3% picked this

    The author considers and rejects a number of possible explanations for a phenomenon, concluding that any attempt at explanation does violence to

    The author considers and rejects two explanations (it's not because young people were moving to the city or because society was getting more secular), but then she proposes an explanation she believes in: it's because the purpose of fiction had changed.

  2. Too Strong: incompatible14% picked this

    The author shows that two explanatory hypotheses are incompatible with each other and gives reasons for

    The word "incompatible" means contradictory. The author doesn't show that any explanations would contradict each other. She just prefers one explanation (purpose of fiction changed) over two others.

  3. Out of Scope: not really distinct5% picked this

    The author describes several explanatory hypotheses and argues that they are not really distinct

    The author is never saying, "I guess in reality all three of these hypotheses are kind of the same. Is there really any difference between young rural people moving to cities and the purpose of fiction had changed?" Of course there is! And the author isn't saying otherwise.

  4. Out of Scope: classificatory hypothesis12% picked this

    The author proposes two versions of a classificatory hypothesis, indicates the need for some such hypothesis, and then sets out a counterargument in preparation

    There aren't any classificatory hypotheses being discussed. The author is just trying to offer causal hypotheses for why Jewett's novels are very different from the old domestic novels. The author never "indicates the need for a classificatory hypothesis", nor does she present any counterargument that's rejected in the final paragraph.

  5. Correct66% picked this

    The author mentions a number of explanatory hypotheses, gives a mildly favorable comment on them, and then advocates and elaborates another explanation that the

    Why this is right

    This is the closest to what we were looking for: "Considers one or two possible explanations and then proposes and defends an alternate explanation". A number in this case is 'two'. Why are Jewett's novels different from those of domestic novelists? 1. it's because the rural young are migrating to cities 2. it's because of the increasing secularization of society The author gives a mildly favorable comment: we might attribute the differences to such historical transformations. But then the author pivots to the explanation of "it's because the purpose of fiction had changed", and elaborates on that one and continues defending it throughout the final paragraph. Hence, the author considers it more fundamentally correct.

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

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