Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT143 S2 P1 Q5 Explanation

Documenting Indigenous Culture

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

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Passage

Having spent several decades trying to eliminate the unself-conscious “colonial gaze” characteristic of so many early ethnographic films, visual anthropologists from the industrialized West who study indigenous cultures are presently struggling with an even more profound transformation of their discipline. Because inexpensive video equipment is now available throughout the world, many indigenous cultures. Reaction to this phenomenon within Western anthropological circles is sharply divided.

One faction, led by anthropologist James Weiner, sees the proliferation of video and television as the final assault of Western values on indigenous cultures. Weiner argues that the spread of video represents “a devaluation of the different,” culminating in the replacement of genuine historical, linguistic, social, and cultural difference with superficial difference truth value to these films simply because they are made by indigenous peoples are theoretically naive.

But Weiner’s opponents contend that his views betray a certain nostalgia for the idea of the “noble savage.” One such opponent, anthropologist Faye Ginsburg, concedes that no Western object that has entered cultural circulation since the fifteenth century has been neutral, but she considers it little more than boilerplate technological determinism to affords societies—especially oral ones—an invaluable opportunity to strengthen native languages and traditions threatened by Western exposure.

The Brazilian fieldwork of anthropologist Terence Turner, who studies the relationship between traditional Kayapo culture and Kayapo videotapes, lends credence to Ginsburg’s position. Primarily an oral society, the Kayapo use video to document both ceremonial performances and transactions with representatives of the Brazilian government (this latter use is intended to provide legally with Kayapo culture, it seems, that it transforms any Kayapo who uses it into a Westerner.

What this question is testing

Five Questions

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
5.

The passage provides information that is most helpful in answering which one of

Answer choices

  1. Correct86% picked this

    Why do the Kayapo use video technology to create

    Why this is right

    If we CTRL + F or scan for "legal", we'll find the 4th paragraph saying: Primarily an oral society, the Kayapo use video to document both ceremonial performances and transactions with representatives of the Brazilian government (this latter use is intended to provide legally binding records of the transactions). It sounds like the Kayapo use video to create legal records because they're primarily an oral society. If they don't have much writing in their society, then they might not feel comfortable using written contracts to create legal records. So instead they just videotape their oral agreements, so that it's "in writing" on the videotape.

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

  2. Unsupported Causal Relationship: origin3% picked this

    What is the origin of the idea of the

    The beginning of the 3rd paragraph alludes to an old-fashioned idea called the "noble savage", but we don't get any backstory on where it came from.

  3. Inverse Bait: have not yet2% picked this

    Which indigenous cultures have not yet adopted Western

    The only named indigenous culture in the whole passage is the Kayapo, and they have adopted Western video technologies. We wouldn't be able to answer this question then, since no other indigenous cultures were ever discussed in the passage.

  4. Too Specific: Which Western technologies8% picked this

    Which Western technologies entered cultural circulation in the

    The beginning of the 3rd paragraph says that "no Western object that has entered cultural circulation since the 15th century has been neutral", but the passage provides no specific examples of any technology that actually entered circulation in the 15th century.

  5. Unsupported Causal Relationship: why it's inexpensive1% picked this

    What factors have made video equipment as inexpensive as it

    The middle of the 1st paragraph says, "Because inexpensive video equipment is now available throughout the world ... ", but there is no causal backstory provided for why video equipment is available around the world at an inexpensive price.

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