Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT135 S3 P1 Q7 Explanation

Latina Autobiographies

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TopicsWeakenHumanities

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Passage

In the 1980s there was a proliferation of poetry collections, short stories, and novels published by women of Latin American descent in the United States. By the end of the decade, another genre of U.S. Latina writing, the autobiography, also came into prominence with the publication of three notable autobiographical collections: Loving by Aurora Levins Morales and Rosario Morales; and Borderlands/La Frontera, by Gloria Anzaldúa.

These collections are innovative at many levels. They confront traditional linguistic boundaries by using a mix of English and Spanish, and they each address the politics of multiple cultural identities by exploring the interrelationships among such factors as ethnicity, gender, and language. This effort manifests itself in the generically mixed structure of the most part, giving preference to any of these modes of presentation.

In Borderlands/La Frontera, Anzaldúa presents her personal history and the history of the Mexican American community to which she belongs by juxtaposing narrative sequences and poetry. Moraga’s Loving in the War Years is likewise characterized by a mixture of genres, and, as she states in her introduction, the events in her life employ multigeneric and multivocal forms to express the complexities inherent in the formation of their identities.

Rather than forcing their personal histories to conform to existing generic parameters, these writers have revolutionized the genre of autobiography, redrawing the boundaries of this literary form to make it more amenable to the expression of their own experiences. In doing so, they have shown a strong determination to has for too long taken their silence for granted.

What this question is testing

Weaken

Topic

The author is celebrating how a wave of Latina writers in the 1980s broke open the autobiography genre.

Framework

Highlight Noteworthy.

Main Point

The simpler version: traditional autobiography says "one person, one voice, one genre, one chronology." Latina writers in the 1980s — Moraga, Anzaldúa, the Morales mother/daughter team — broke all of that. They mixed Spanish and English, mixed essays and poems and stories and journal entries, reordered events by political growth instead of by date, and even brought multiple authors into one book. The author thinks they expanded what autobiography can be — to fit their complicated lives.

P1: The flourishing

In the 1980s a wave of Latina writing in many genres appeared, capped off by three landmark autobiographical collections.

P2: What was new

Bilingual writing. Mixing essays, sketches, stories, poems, journal entries — without ranking any of them. Exploring how ethnicity, gender, and language interact.

P3: Concrete examples — and the wildest one

Anzaldúa: weaves narrative and poetry. Moraga: reorders by political development, not date. Getting Home Alive: two authors (mother and daughter), woven together, sometimes commenting on each other. May seem chaotic but is deliberate.

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The question
7.

Which one of the following would, if true, most undermine the author’s claim in the last paragraph about the effect that the Latina autobiographies discussed had

Answer choices

  1. Contradiction10% picked this

    Few autobiographical works published after 1985 have been recognized for their effective use of chronologically linear prose as a means of portraying the

    This would support the claim in the fourth paragraph.

  2. Too Narrow19% picked this

    Few critically acclaimed books written by Latina authors have been autobiographical collections consisting partly or wholly of essays, poems, short

    This would not undermine the claim in the fourth paragraph, because it could still be the case that the impact of those few Latina writers was revolutionary for the genre.

  3. Too Weak8% picked this

    Many autobiographies have been written by authors in the United States since 1985, and some of these present a unified, chronologically linear

    This would not undermine the claim in the fourth paragraph.

  4. Correct56% picked this

    Several nineteenth-century autobiographies that are generally unknown among contemporary critics of twentieth-century autobiography are characterized by generically mixed

    Why this is right

    This would suggest that the authors mentioned in the passage might not have actually revolutionized the genre.

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

  5. Supported by Passage7% picked this

    Several multigeneric, nonautobiographical collections consisting at least partly of poetry, short stories, or essays by Latina authors have been published since 1985, and many

    This would be consistent with the claim in the fourth paragraph.

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