Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT137 S1 P2 Q12 Explanation

!Kung Woman

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

TopicsMeaning in ContextSociety

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Passage

Taking the explication of experience as its object as well as its method, Marjorie Shostak’s Nisa: The Life and Words of a !Kung Woman weaves together three narrative strands, and in doing so challenges the ethnographer’s penchant for the general and the anonymous. The first strand, the autobiographical details of a 50-year-old the story of an intercultural encounter in which the distinction between ethnographer and subject becomes blurred.

Nisa explains Nisa’s personality in terms of !Kung ways and, for the general reader, corrects and qualifies a number of received attitudes about “simple” societies. Michel Leiris’ warning that “We are all too inclined to consider a people happy if considering them makes us happy” applies particularly to the !Kung, whose seemingly fights over food undermine the idyllic vision Westerners cherish of childhoods lived in such “simple” circumstances.

Woven into Nisa’s autobiography are allusions to Shostak’s personal engagement with issues of gender. Nisa’s response to “What is it to be a !Kung woman?” also seems to answer another question, “What is it to be a woman?” In fact, Nisa’s answers illuminate not just one woman’s experience, but women’s experience in much ethnographic literature omits the perspective of women about women.

Nisa’s story is interwoven with Shostak’s presentation of their encounter; at times each seems to exist primarily in response to the other. Nisa’s autobiography is a distinct narrative in a particular voice, but it is manifestly the product of a collaboration. Indeed, by casting Nisa in the shape of a “life,” Shostak the dialogue between Nisa and Shostak that a shaped story emerges from this seemingly featureless background.

What this question is testing

Meaning in Context

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
12.

It can be inferred that the “potent Western literary convention” mentioned in the last paragraph is most probably which

Answer choices

  1. Unrelated to Goal8% picked this

    personal

    We're looking for something like "a shaped story". A personal revelation might occur along the way of a shaped story, but a revelation isn't itself a synonym for shaped story.

  2. Unrelated to Goal5% picked this

    dramatic

    We're looking for something like "a shaped story". A story might contain moments of dramatic emphasis along the way, but "dramatic emphasis" isn't itself a synonym for shaped story.

  3. Unrelated to Goal10% picked this

    expository

    We're looking for something like "a shaped story". I'm not sure what "expository comparison" even means. Exposition = background information. When you give a little opening context before the story starts, that's called exposition. An expository comparison would mean a comparison offered for the sake of providing contextual information. But exposition is information, not narrative. It occurs before we hear a story, or as a pause-button in the story, but it is never the story itself.

  4. Unrelated to Goal13% picked this

    poetic

    We're looking for something like "a shaped story". Poetic metaphor may occur along the way of a shaped story, but metaphor isn't itself a synonym for shaped story.

  5. Correct63% picked this

    novelistic

    Why this is right

    We're looking for something like "a shaped story". This is by far our best answer. Is it weird? Yes, a little. Why are they throwing novelistic in there? It's not necessary; they're just trying to make it less clear that this answer is good. It seems like the passage is talking about narrative storytelling: beginning / middle / end rising action / climax / falling action But that is essentially the same as novelistic storytelling, i.e. the type of storytelling we'd commonly find in a novel.

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

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