Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT145 S1 P3 Q18 Explanation

Gender Studies

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

TopicsMethodHumanities

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Passage

Passage A During the 1990s, the study of history witnessed both a dramatic integration of the study of women’s history into the historical mainstream and a transition from the subject of women to the issue of gender. Women as individuals receded into the background, and something more abstract called gender relations came to explorations of how an imagined domesticity, or separate sphere for women, shaped culture and politics.

This scholarship demonstrates the explanatory potential embedded in gender, but it also reveals why the topic “women” is now so often dismissed as too narrow and particular a category to illuminate historical processes. Where the study of the history of women is seen today as having celebratory content—its effort is to find offers an analytic framework within which to analyze social and political structures.

And yet I am left to wonder what we have lost as we turn our attention to gender. I share the suspicion of many of my colleagues that gender obscures as much as it reveals: that in focusing on in which individual women engaged their worlds.

Passage B Part of the Roman emperor Augustus’s response to the disorder and disharmony of the Triumviral Wars (32–30 B.C.E.) was to promote laws aimed at restoring old-fashioned Roman morality. Augustus presented the peace and stability of Rome as resting upon the integrity of the Roman family, and he paid particular attention B.C.E. and 9 C.E. that penalized adultery and rewarded bearers of legitimate children.

When Augustus thereby rooted Roman prosperity and peace in the Roman family, he drew particular attention to women as significant participants in the system: their good behavior was partly responsible for the health of the state. Thus in this period, the gender roles assigned to women were becoming at once more constrained position in the state by accepting the title Pater Patriae, “Father of the Fatherland.”

Within such a sociopolitical setting, it should occasion no surprise that Augustan-period artists drew on the iconography of the household in imagining the empire. Images of women concisely expressed Augustus’s imperial project, a control of domestic space the present look like the idealized past.

What this question is testing

Method

Your task

Describe how the argument proceeds — the technique it uses to reach its conclusion.

Common trap

Answers that describe a method the argument doesn't actually use.

Winning move

Track the role each statement plays, then match that to the choice describing the same moves.

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

The question
18.

The summary given in passage B (first paragraph of Passage B) most closely corresponds to which one of the following approaches to historical analysis

Answer choices

  1. Opposite4% picked this

    seeking to uncover the history of women

    This was the other approach mentioned in passage A; the old one that the author seems to nostalgically miss.

  2. Correct83% picked this

    exploring how a concept of domesticity shapes culture

    Why this is right

    This pulls language from the last sentence of A's first paragraph, where we found the overlap between "domesticity shaping culture and politics" and passage B's notion that "the peace and stability of Rome rested upon the integrity of the Roman family, including women in this domestic context as wives and mothers".

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

  3. Opposite3% picked this

    trying to rediscover and honor lost

    This alludes to the other approach mentioned in passage A; the old one that the author seems to nostalgically miss. This was the approach that profiled individual women (it honored our overlooked, "lost" ancestors).

  4. Weaker Match7% picked this

    evaluating the role of masculinity in regulating thought

    Even though the article in passage B is about Augustus, and the gender relations quote from passage A about men is that "articles about men evaluated the role of masculinity in regulating thought and action", the actual quote highlighted from passage B has nothing to do with masculinity. A man, Augustus, is saying something, but what he's saying relates more to the way that an imagined domesticity infused how society thought of women than it does to how masculinity regulated his thought and action.

  5. Fails Passage B4% picked this

    arguing that gender analysis obscures as much as

    "Arguing that gender analysis obscures as much as it reveals" is not an approach being carried out in passage B, because passage B is doing gender analysis, not critiquing it.

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