Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT150 S1 P3 Q19 ExplanationGenres of Fiction

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

TopicsApplicationHumanities

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Passage

Passage A In a 1978 lecture titled “The Detective Story,” Jorge Luis Borges observes that, “The detective novel has created a special type of reader,” and adds, “If Poe created the detective story, he subsequently created the reader of detective fiction.” For Borges, this “special type of reader” confronts literature with such his account also draws our attention to an insight into the general nature of literature.

Literature, according to Borges, is “an aesthetic event” that “requires the conjunction of reader and text,” and what the detective story highlights, he suggests, is the way in which the reader forms the conditions of possibility for this “aesthetic event.” Borges imagines that the participation of the reader is not extrinsic to read, rather than, say, a set of formal elements found within the works.

Passage B One can, if one wants, define genres of fiction as sets of texts sharing certain thematic similarities, but the taxonomic difficulties of such an approach are notorious. The problem of “borderline cases”—especially in science fiction—arises so often that the definition fails to demarcate genres entirely. A more fruitful way to that yield a particularly rich reading experience when read according to one protocol rather than another.

Our major critical effort must therefore be an exploration of the specific workings of many of the individual rhetorical configurations that contour, exploit, or even create a specific reading protocol. Here—to give an example outside of fiction—is a general description of one aspect of the reading protocols associated with poetry: with poetry, rhetorical figures by which differences between our world and the world of the story are suggested.

What this question is testing

Application

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
19.

Which one of the following is an application of a principle underlying passage B to the view of detective fiction ascribed to

Answer choices, explained

  1. Too Strong: cannot include supernatural1% picked this

    A story in the genre of detective fiction cannot include any supernatural

    This isn't anything like our prephrase. We're looking for something talking about the detective fiction reading protocol. Why would passage B outlaw all supernatural characters from detective fiction? Does having a supernatural character interfere with your ability to use the detective fiction reading protocol? It doesn't need to. You're still using the same reading protocol to try to solve the whodunit. Was it the ex-wife, the butler, or the supernatural ghost that haunts their house?

  2. Too Strong3% picked this

    Stories in the genre of detective fiction portray crimes that inevitably reflect the social anxieties of the time

    Too Strong: inevitably Out of Scope: social anxieties This is incredibly strong. 100% of crimes portrayed reflect social anxieties? Where is any of this coming from? We want something about the detective fiction reading protocol.

  3. Correct81% picked this

    Stories in the genre of detective fiction employ rhetorical figures designed to encourage readers' suspicions about characters and

    Why this is right

    Here's an answer about the detective fiction reading protocol: Detective fiction is written in a way that's designed to reward readers who are interpreting this story with the overly-suspicious reading protocol of a detective fiction reader. To read detective fiction in the style most rewarding to that genre, you're trying to solve the crime and you know that there will be false leads and misdirects. And "everyone's a suspect!" Just as poetry is designed to reward people listening for the phonic sounds of the chosen words, just as science fiction is designed to reward people who are looking for the interesting ways in which this fictional society is different from our real one, so too detective fiction is designed to reward people who are looking for clues and trying to solve the crime.

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

  4. Too Strong: must involve10% picked this

    A story in the genre of detective fiction must involve the unraveling of a puzzle, the solution to which is discovered by the reader

    This is certainly reasonably close to something passage B might say, but it's just said in too extreme a fashion. Passage B definitely is thinking that Borges is right -- readers of detective fiction are expecting a certain kind of book and so they read it a certain kind of way. But by certain kind of book we mean something looser, like "a story in which the reader confronts the story with incredulity and suspicions" because detective fiction apparently likes to troll its readers with fake leads and misdirects. We can't get as specific as "it must involve the unraveling of a puzzle, in which the reader always discovers the solution at the same time the protagonist does". Passage B would certainly allow for the possibility that sometimes the reader figures out the solution earlier than the protagonist and sometimes not until the protagonist spells it out for the reader.

  5. Too Strong: not a clear genre6% picked this

    The reading protocols associated with detective fiction are too universally applicable to constitute a well

    One would assume that Passage B, lover of distinctive reading protocols, would consider detective fiction a clear genre, since a reader's expectations and style of reading are so distinctive: they are trying to solve a crime and suspiciously interpreting each new detail of the story. We certainly don't have support to go harshly in the other direction and say that its reading protocol game is so weak that you can barely consider it a genre.

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