PT133.S4.P2.Q10

PrepTest 133 - Section 4 - Passage 2 - Question 10

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P1

The literary development of Kate Chopin, author of . ███ █████████ ███████ ████ ███ ███████ ███████ ██████ ██ ██████████████████ ███████ ████████ ███

Intro Topic · Chopin's literary development
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Background · Chopin grew up with sentimental novels
Features of sentimental novels.
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Intro Group · Local Colorists (L.C.)
Chopin initially modeled her work on local colorists. Who were they?
P2

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L.C. Social Context · Expanding opportunities for women
Local colorists liked that traditional "women's culture" was dissolving.
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L.C. Attitude · Local colorists neutrally observed these changes
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L.C. Attitude Change · Local colorists mourn the loss of "women's culture"
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Illustrate L.C. Attitude · House as female nurturing, etc.
P3

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Contrast to L.C. · Chopin writes about different subjects
Loneliness, isolation, frustration... not traditional "women's culture."
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Similar to L.C. · Chopin uses the same conventions
Callback to "scientific detachment" of the L.C. to tell melodramatic tales
P4

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Evolution · Chopin discards L.C. in favor of New Women (N.W.)
Moved past L.C.'s nostalgia (for "women's culture"). Modeled later work on N.W.
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N.W. Details · Innovation in form and content
Unlike both sentimental novels and L.C.'s short stories, N.W. explores fantasy; parable; different worlds; and uses impressionistic methods to explore female consciousness
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The Awakening · Took N.W. approach further
Used impressionistic methods to render the female consciousness.
Passage Style
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10.

According to the passage, which ███ ██ ███ █████████ ███████████ ███ ██████ █████ ████ █████ ██████████████████ █████ ████████

a

elevated, romantic language

Unstated and anti-supported. This was a convention of sentimental novels that Chopin sought to avoid, which she did by following the local colorists’ more detached approach.

8%
b

mythic images of ████████ ████████

Unstated and anti-supported. This was a convention of the local colorists, but one that Chopin didn’t adopt.

7%
c

detached narrative stance

Stated. This was a convention that Chopin adopted from the local colorists.

75%
d

strong plot lines

Unstated. The “strength” of anyone’s plot lines isn’t discussed in the passage.

3%
e

lonely, isolated protagonists

Unstated and anti-supported. This was one of Chopin’s own conventions, and nothing suggests that she adopted it from other writers. In fact, the author explicitly notes that she didn’t adopt this convention from the local colorists. And the author seems to suggest that Chopin was writing about these kinds of protagonists back in the 1870s and 1880s, when she was interested in the local colorists, back before she became influenced by the New Women. So Chopin doesn’t seem to have adopted this convention from either group.

8%

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