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Posts: 32055
Own Kudos [?]: 38215 [0]
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Re: Cinematic renditions of historic pieces of literature [#permalink]
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OFFICIAL EXPLANATION QUESTION #3



D

Questions of this type reward you for understanding the logic of a passage. In this case, the first highlighted sentence is an assertion that lays out the topic and scope of the passage. The second highlighted sentence is a specific example that the author offers to illustrate his main point. Choice (D), the correct answer, hits this prediction squarely. Choice (A) is incorrect because the second sentence does not contradict the first. You can reject (B) as it mischaracterizes the first sentence; there is nothing disparate about its components. You can reject (C) because it gets the second sentence wrong; the second sentence is an example, not an argument (which would need a conclusion supported by evidence). Choice (E) distorts the relationship between the two sentences; the second doesn't contradict the first.
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Re: Cinematic renditions of historic pieces of literature [#permalink]
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OFFICIAL EXPLANATION QUESTION #4


A

This is another question that asks you to put yourself in the author's shoes and try to reason from his perspective. The tone of the passage is neutral; even when describing Henry's darker moments, the author passes no judgment. You can therefore reject choice (C), as the author is not doing a character study. Though choices (B) and (D) are mutually exclusive, they are both incorrect. The author states no preference for either of the film versions he describes. Choice (E) is incorrect because the author states no preference for cinematic versions that maintain greater fidelity to the source material. Choice (A) is correct; it matches the author's purpose for the passage. In order for cultural events to influence the interpretation of classic literature, such literature must be interpretable.
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Re: Cinematic renditions of historic pieces of literature [#permalink]
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