Borges' perspective ·Participation of reader is essential to literature
Genres are united by how people read those texts. (Detective novels are detective novels because people read them with certain conventions, such as reading with suspicion, looking for clues, etc.)
Better definition of genre ·Based on different reading protocols (ways of reading)
Texts most central to a genre are those written for the purpose of using a particular reading protocol. (So, a detective novel is a detective novel because it was written to take advantage of the norms of reading detective novels.)
We pay more attention to how the text suggests differences between our world and the alternate fictional world.
Passage Style
15.
Which one of the following ████ ██████████ █████████ ███ ██████ █████████ ██ ███ ██████ ██ ███████ █ ██████ ████████ █████
Question Type
Author’s attitude
Implied
Passage A seems to describe Borges’ view approvingly. In the very last sentence, the author brings in her own voice: “Thus, what unites works belonging to the same genre is the way those works are read, rather than, say, a set of formal elements found within the works.” This aligns with Borges’ view.
a
complete agreement
This is the best answer, because Passage A seems to describe Borges’ view approvingly. In the very last sentence, the author brings in her own voice: “Thus, what unites works belonging to the same genre is the way those works are read, rather than, say, a set of formal elements found within the works.” This aligns with Borges’ view. The word “complete” doesn’t make this answer wrong, because we have no reason to think the author has only partial agreement with Borges. She never suggests Borges might be wrong about any aspect of his view.
b
reluctant acceptance
There’s nothing reluctant about the author’s acceptance. We have no hint of potential disagreement or uncertainty about whether Borges’ view is correct.
c
cautious neutrality
The author isn’t neutral or cautious. We have no hint of potential disagreement or uncertainty about whether Borges’ view is correct. So there’s no reason think the author is “cautious.”
d
strong skepticism
The author doesn’t suggest any kind of disagreement or potential disagreement with Borges.
e
outright rejection
The author doesn’t suggest any kind of disagreement or potential disagreement with Borges.
Difficulty
69% of people who answer get this correct
This is a moderately difficult question.
It is similar in difficulty to other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%135
150
75%165
Analysis
Author’s attitude
Implied
Comparative
Humanities
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
69%
163
b
5%
155
c
23%
160
d
2%
151
e
1%
157
Question history
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