Aida Overton Walker (1880–1914), one of the most widely acclaimed African American performers of the early twentieth century, was known largely for popularizing a dance form known as the cakewalk through her choreographing, performance, and teaching of the dance. ███
Intro topic ·How Walker popularized the cakewalk dance
This is an inference from the author's perspective question. The author discusses Walker’s significance briefly at the start of P1 and much more in P4. His view is that she was important for popularizing the cakewalk, and that she did so by emphasizing certain aspects of the dance that appealed to a range of audiences.
Strongly supported. Walker helped the cakewalk appeal to a range of audiences by highlighting certain existing elements of the dance that different audiences particularly liked. She emphasized the dance’s fundamental grace and showcased certain elements that people felt were authentic to the dance.
b
Walker's version of ███ ████████ ████████ ██ ██████ █████████ ████ ████████ ████████ ███ ███████ ███ ███████████ ███ ███████ ██████████
Unsupported. The author lays out the reasons for the success of Walker’s cakewalk in P4. Satire isn’t one of them.
Anti-supported. The author indicates that Walker had a singular interpretation of the cakewalk, and different aspects within that one interpretation (grace, authenticity, and flourish) appealed to different groups. The author doesn’t suggest that Walker ever created multiple different versions of the dance.
Anti-supported. European American performers were the ones to first parody other cakewalk performers. And though the term “mimetic vertigo” appears in the passage, it’s used to describe the cakewalk’s broader history of layering different parodies on top of each other. It’s not a reference to Walker’s work specifically.
Anti-supported. The author doesn’t suggest that Walker separated the cakewalk’s African elements from its European ones. In fact, he suggests that the fusion of African and European elements was fundamental to the cakewalk, and we have no reason to think that Walker strayed from that fusion. To the contrary—Walker created a dance that was considered the most authentic version of the cakewalk.
Difficulty
38% of people who answer get this correct
This is a very difficult question.
It is significantly harder than the average question in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%157
169
75%180
Analysis
Author’s perspective
Implied
Art
Single position
Spotlight
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
38%
166
b
7%
157
c
47%
161
d
2%
156
e
5%
158
Question history
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