Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT133 S4 P2 Q10 Explanation

Kate Chopin’s Literary Development

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Passage

The literary development of Kate Chopin, author of The Awakening (1899), took her through several phases of nineteenth-century women’s fiction. Born in 1850, Chopin grew up with the sentimental novels that formed the bulk of the fiction of the mid–nineteenth century. In these works, authors employed elevated, romantic language to portray female models the works of a group of women writers known as the local colorists.

After 1865, what had traditionally been regarded as “women’s culture” began to dissolve as women entered higher education, the professions, and the political world in greater numbers. The local colorists, who published stories about regional life in the 1870s and 1880s, were attracted to the new worlds opening up to women, and house became an emblem of female nurturing; and the artifacts of domesticity became virtual totemic objects.

Unlike the local colorists, Chopin devoted herself to telling stories of loneliness, isolation, and frustration. But she used the conventions of the local colorists to solve a specific narrative problem: how to deal with extreme psychological states without resorting to the excesses of the sentimental novels she read as a youth. By could tell rather shocking or even melodramatic tales in an uninflected manner.

Chopin did not share the local colorists’ growing nostalgia for the past, however, and by the 1890s she was looking beyond them to the more ambitious models offered by a movement known as the New Women. In the form as well as the content of their work, the New Women writers pursued or content than by their sustained focus on faithfully rendering the workings of the protagonist’s mind.

What this question is testing

Locate Detail

Topic

The author is tracing the development of the writer Kate Chopin — showing how she moved through three different kinds of women's fiction in the 19th century.

Framework

Highlight Noteworthy.

Main Point

The simpler version: Chopin grew up reading sentimental novels (where women just want to get married well), but she didn't want to write like that. She started by imitating "local colorists" — writers who described regional life with detachment and increasingly mourned a dying domestic women's culture. She borrowed their detached style as a way to tell darker stories without going melodramatic. By the 1890s she was looking past them at the "New Women" writers, who experimented with form and explored women's minds. The Awakening shows her absorbing that approach.

P1: Where she started

Sentimental novels formed the bulk of her childhood reading. As a writer, she modeled herself on local colorists, not on the sentimentalists.

P2: The local colorists' world

After 1865, the traditional domestic women's culture started disappearing. Local colorists wrote about regional life, observing it almost like anthropologists. But as that women's culture continued to fade, they began to romanticize it — turning gardens, houses, and household objects into mythic symbols.

P3: How Chopin used them

Chopin wasn't writing nostalgic stories. She wrote about loneliness, isolation, frustration. But she used the local colorists' detached, regional-observation style as a tool — it let her describe psychologically extreme situations without the gushy excess of the sentimental tradition.

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

The question
10.

According to the passage, which one of the following conventions did Chopin adopt from other

Answer choices

  1. Opposite9% picked this

    elevated, romantic

    This answer describes the language of the sentimental novelists, whose excesses Chopin was hoping to avoid resorting to. This is the opposite of the "dry, detached, scientific, objective" answer we're looking for.

  2. Opposite7% picked this

    mythic images of "women's

    This answer describes something local colorists were doing, but the first sentence of the 4th paragraph clarifies that "Chopin did not share the local colorists' growing nostalgia for [women's culture]".

  3. Correct74% picked this

    detached narrative

    Why this is right

    This matches well with "reporting events ... in an uninflected manner", from the last sentence of the 3rd paragraph. This convention was adopted from the local colorists, who we are told in the 2nd paragraph, "observed culture and character with almost scientific detachment".

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

  4. Opposite3% picked this

    strong plot

    Chopin is not ever identified as known for strong plot lines. In the final paragraph, it's saying "Instead of the crisply plotted short stories of the local colorists, the New Women (whom Chopin modeled herself after here) experimented with impressionistic methods".

  5. Just Chopin7% picked this

    lonely, isolated

    Chopin definitely had lonely, isolated protagonists, but the passage doesn't suggest that she adopted this convention from anyone else. The sentimental novelists would have had married women (not lonely). The local colorists would have had women were going out into the world (not isolated). And we didn't really get a sense of what protagonists New Women would have.

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