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Most literature is written such that the order of reading is unambiguo [#permalink]
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The author of the passage would most likely consider option (c) Marc Saporta's Composition No. 1 as an example of ergodic literature. In the passage, it is mentioned that ergodic literature challenges the reader to determine an appropriate order for reading the text on the page or even an appropriate order of the pages themselves. Marc Saporta's Composition No. 1, presented as a box of 150 loose pages intended to be shuffled and read in a random order, fits this description. So the reader becomes an active participant in creating the narrative by selecting and arranging the pages, thus experiencing the prose in a non-linear and interactive manner
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Re: Most literature is written such that the order of reading is unambiguo [#permalink]
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QUESTION #1 Official Explanation

A, C The passage defines ergodic literature as works that present the text, pages, or chapters without a prescribed order. Both (A) and (C) fit this definition, as Calligrammes presents the text such that it is not to be read “left to right and top to bottom,” and Composition No. 1 does not have a prescribed order to its pages. If matching these answer choices to the definition alone is difficult, compare them to the texts mentioned in the passage; Calligrammes is similar to House of Leaves in its arrangement of text on the page, and Composition No. 1 is similar to the I Ching in the randomness involved in determining its order of reading. (B) does not match this definition. While Finnegans Wake might be difficult to understand or interpret, there is nothing in the description of the novel that suggests that determining the order of reading requires effort on the part of the reader. ​​E
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Re: Most literature is written such that the order of reading is unambiguo [#permalink]
Please someone explain question 2? also tell how to solve such questions?
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Re: Most literature is written such that the order of reading is unambiguo [#permalink]
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The simple trick is to read one or two sentences before the sentence where the word is contained and one sentence after.

Now

Most literature is written such that the order of reading is unambiguous.

The vast majority of literature is written in a clear way. No doubts

Indeed, most Western prose is intended to be read from left to right and top to bottom.

Some literatures go left to the right

This is not the only system, however; texts written in Arabic or Hebrew are read from right to left,

Otheres go the contrary: right to left

and hieroglyphics, which can seem involved to modern eyes, were understood by ancient readers to be read vertically, down columns arranged from left to right.

others like in the ancient Egypt in columns from left to right to read what is written

Notice that aftyer the word involved we do know also that were understood by ancient readers to be read vertically,

Therefore, the egyptians 2000 years BC understood perfectly what to us NOW in 2023 looks like complex or arcane.

I hope this helps or ask for further assistance
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Re: Most literature is written such that the order of reading is unambiguo [#permalink]
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