Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT133 S4 P2 Q11 Explanation

Kate Chopin’s Literary Development

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

TopicsMeaning in ContextHumanities

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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

Meaning in Context

Anticipate

This is a Meaning in Context question. The phrase "women's culture" is in scare quotes, marking it as a specific historical term. To figure out what it means, look at how the passage uses it.

P2 says women's culture began dissolving when women entered higher education, professions, and politics — so women's culture was the previous realm, not those new ones. And the local colorists mourned its passing by elevating "its images" — gardens, houses, domestic artifacts. So women's culture was the domestic realm.

Goal

Find the answer about domestic experience. Common traps:

Regional customs — the local colorists wrote about regional life, but that's not the same as women's culture

Artistic productions, educational achievements, political activities — these are exactly the realms women's culture was dissolving into, not what it was

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The question
11.

As it is used by the author in the third paragraph of the passage, “women’s culture” most probably refers to a culture that was

Answer choices

  1. Correct89% picked this

    domestic

    Why this is right

    P2 says local colorists mourned the demise of women's culture by investing "its images" with mythic significance — gardens, houses, domestic artifacts. That fixes "women's culture" as the realm expressed through domestic experience. (A) captures this directly.

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

  2. Wrong View9% picked this

    regional

    The local colorists wrote about regional life, but the passage describes women's culture in domestic, not regional, terms. Regional customs and "women's culture" aren't equated in the passage.

  3. Out of Scope1% picked this

    artistic

    P2 doesn't say women's culture was expressed through artistic productions. It's described through everyday domestic images. Artistic productions don't feature in the description of women's culture.

  4. Wrong View1% picked this

    educational

    Higher education is one of the new realms women were entering as women's culture dissolved — so educational achievements are precisely the things "women's culture" was not. (D) gets the direction backwards.

  5. Wrong View0% picked this

    political

    Like education, the political world is among the new realms women were entering, dissolving the older domestic women's culture. So political activities aren't what women's culture was — they're what it was dissolving into.

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