Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT18 S3 P3 Q19 Explanation

Changing Cherokee

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

TopicsLocate DetailSociety

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Passage

Until recently, it was thought that the Cherokee, a Native American tribe, were compelled to assimilate Euro-American culture during the 1820s. During that decade, it was supposed, White missionaries arrived and, together with their part Cherokee intermediaries, imposed the benefits of “civilization” on Cherokee tribes while the United States government actively promoted economic and political autonomy would automatically mean the end of its cultural autonomy as well.

William G. McLoughlin has recently argued that not only did Cherokee culture flourish during and after the 1820s, but the Cherokee themselves actively and continually reshaped their culture. Missionaries did have a decisive impact during these years, he argues, but that impact was far from what it was intended to be. The did not, according to McLoughlin, undermine the elitist reforms, but supplemented them with popular, traditionalist counterparts.

Traditionalist Cherokee did not reject the elitist reforms outright, McLoughlin argues, simply because they recognized that there was more than one way to use the skills the missionaries could provide them. As he quotes one group as saying, “We want our children to learn English so that the White man cannot cheat resulted were distinctively Cherokee, yet reflected the larger political and social setting in which they flourished.

Because his work concentrates on the nineteenth century, McLoughlin unfortunately overlooks earlier sources of influence, such as eighteenth-century White resident traders and neighbors, thus obscuring the relative impact of the missionaries of the 1820s in contributing to both acculturalization and resistance to it among the Cherokee. However, McLoughlin is undoubtedly correct in of how Cherokee culture changed while retaining its essential identity after confronting the missionaries.

What this question is testing

Locate Detail

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.

According to the passage, McLoughlin cites which one of the following as a contributing factor in the revival of traditional religious beliefs among the

Answer choices

  1. Out of Scope: increasing rate2% picked this

    Missionaries were gaining converts at an increasing rate as the

    It doesn't say anywhere that missionaries were gaining converts at an increasing rate. We definitely don't see that within our Support Window, the 2nd paragraph.

  2. Too Specific: most6% picked this

    The traditionalist Cherokee majority thought that most of the reforms initiated by the missionaries’ converts

    This is pretty close to what we want. We know that the revivals were a reaction against the missionaries, but we don't have any textual support for the notion that the majority thought that "more than 50% of the reforms would corrupt Cherokee culture". It's a pretty reasonable speculation, but we can't point to any line reference that sounds like that. If this were Most Supported, it would be a pretty decent answer, but since the question stem is Must Be True (McLoughlin cites), we want explicit support.

  3. Correct71% picked this

    Missionaries unintentionally created conflict among the Cherokee by favoring the interests of the acculturating elite at the expense

    Why this is right

    Because this is a Must Be True question stem, we should see some explicit support and we do. The 2nd and 3rd sentences of the 2nd paragraph provide support: Missionaries did have a decisive impact ... but far from what it was intended to be (Missionaries unintentionally ...) The missionaries' tendency to cater to the interests of an acculturating part-Cherokee elite at the expense of the more traditionalist full-Cherokee majority created great intratribal tensions. (created conflict by favoring interests of elite at expense of traditional majority)

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

  4. Same as (B)11% picked this

    Traditionalist Cherokee recognized that only some of the reforms instituted by a small Cherokee elite would be

    There's really not much difference between this answer and choice (B), which sort of cancels each of them out. In both cases, they present a reasonable idea that would be worth considering on a Most Supported task, but since this is Must Be True (McLoughlin cites which one), we would need to be able to point to a sentence where we hear that the traditionalists recognized that only some reforms would be beneficial.

  5. Out of Scope: political supremacy9% picked this

    A small group of Cherokee converted by missionaries attempted to institute reforms designed to acquire political supremacy for

    This answer sounds very close to describing the 3rd sentence of the 2nd paragraph, but it doesn't say that the elite were trying to acquire political supremacy for themselves in the Cherokee council. It says they were trying to "legitimize their own and the Cherokee Nation's place in the new republic of the US".

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