Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT132 S3 P1 Q7 Explanation

Ezekiel Mphahlele

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

TopicsInferenceHumanities

Keep going in LSAT Lab

  • Save & drill this skill build targeted practice sets from questions like this one

  • Video walkthroughs watch every question solved step by step

  • 81 official LSATs as questions, timed sections & full-length tests

Full official LSAT questions are available through LawHub. This page provides LSAT Lab's explanation, strategy, and review tools without republishing the full official question.

Passage

The work of South African writer Ezekiel Mphahlele has confounded literary critics, especially those who feel compelled to draw a sharp distinction between autobiography and fiction. These critics point to Mphahlele's best-known works—his 1959 autobiography Down Second Avenue and his 1971 novel The Wanderers—to illustrate the problem of categorizing his work. While that Mphahlele manipulates different prose forms purely in the service of the social message he advances.

Even where critics give him a favorable reading, all too often their reviews carry a negative subtext. For example, one critic said of The Wanderers that if anger, firsthand experiences, compassion, and topicality were the sole requirements for great literature, the novel might well be one of the masterpieces of this declining balk at this vision because Mphahlele provides no road maps for bringing such a future about.

Mphahlele himself shows little interest in establishing guidelines to distinguish autobiography from fiction. Though he does refer to Down Second Avenue as an autobiography and The Wanderers as a novel, he asserts that no novelist can write complete fiction or absolute fact. It is the nature of writing, at least the writing social criticism of one kind or another. If you don't, you are completely irrelevant—you don't count."

What this question is testing

Inference

Topic

The author is defending the South African writer Ezekiel Mphahlele against critics who get hung up on labels.

Framework

Highlight Noteworthy.

Main Point

The simpler version: critics keep arguing about whether Mphahlele's books are "really" autobiography or "really" fiction. Mphahlele thinks that's a silly question. For him, every piece of writing draws on experience (so it's in some sense factual) and shapes that experience to carry a message (so it's in some sense fiction). The point of writing, he says, is the social criticism — not the genre label.

P1: The labeling problem

Critics complain that his autobiography reads too fictional and his novel reads too autobiographical. The author says they're missing the point — Mphahlele is using whatever prose form fits his social message.

P2: Even nice reviews damn him

One critic basically said: Others write off the novel completely because it has real people in it. Critics also balk at Mphahlele's social vision because it's a vision, not a how-to guide.

P3: How Mphahlele actually thinks about it

He doesn't care about the labels. No writer can produce pure fact or pure fiction. Writing draws from your life and shapes that life into messages. The whole point of writing is the social criticism, not the classification. He puts it bluntly: if you're not writing some kind of social criticism, you don't count.

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

The question
7.

Which one of the following is most strongly suggested by the information

Answer choices

  1. Contradicted3% picked this

    Mphahlele's stance as a humanist and an integrationist derives from an outlook on writing that recognizes a sharp

    Mphahlele is not interested in distinguishing autobiography from fiction (third paragraph).

  2. Too Strong36% picked this

    The social vision contained in a work is irrelevant to critics who feel compelled to find distinct categories in

    It’s not that critics find the social vision to be irrelevant, but that they miss the social message in the first place (first paragraph).

  3. Contradicted9% picked this

    Critics are concerned with categorizing the works they read not as a means to judge the quality of the works but as a way

    Critics of Mphahlele are concerned with categorizing his works as a means to judge the quality of his works (first paragraph and second paragraph).

  4. Correct48% picked this

    If Mphahlele were to provide direction as to how his vision of the future might be realized, more critics

    Why this is right

    This is supported in the second paragraph.

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

  5. Too Strong3% picked this

    For a work to be classified as a novel, it must not contain

    The Wanderers is criticized for having an autobiographical framework (second paragraph), but this does not mean that novels cannot have any autobiographical elements.

Continue the review in LSAT Lab

Save this question, watch the video walkthrough, and drill similar questions in your LSAT Lab account.

LSAT Lab

Turn this review into a targeted study plan.

Save this question, drill more like it, watch the video walkthrough, and track your progress in your LSAT Lab account.

Start practicing free