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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
mind wrote:
All correct, except q19. Can someone explain q19? I was wavering between A D E, selected A. Please explain why A wrong. I chose A because it said "tendency of a predominantly male academic establishment to form preconceptions about women," in the passage it does not seem like the author mentioned anything about the establishment was being predominantly MALE.


Agree with your point that there is no explicit mention of "predominantly male academic establishment" however you can infer it from:
a. presence of an academic establishment, which keeps giving reviews & criticisms that are prejudiced in nature
b. many places you will find mentions of sexism, theoreticians of feminist literary criticism constantly striving to make a place for women in the society and in this academic arena
c. there is no mention of any struggles wrt women v/s women on basis of status, ego etc. (there is a mention of power struggle, but its in a different context => which is actually option D)
=> so, why would the female scholars be so careful about what they write and how they analyze, unless there is some kind of bias/prejudice within the academic establishment => and based on the passage this is heavily focussed on gender
=> you can infer it is "predominantly male" (if above doesnt suffice, try looking at the passage in the lens of not "predominantly male", many of the struggles, problems faced by female scholars wont make sense)

Thus eliminated A, its an inference.
Option D => you have a direct reference of it in the last paragraph:
"These questions are political in the sense that the debate over them will inevitably be less an exploration of abstract matters in a spirit of disinterested inquiry than an academic power struggle in which the careers and professional fortunes of many women scholars only now entering the academic profession in substantial numbers-will be at stake"

Leaving you with option E - which itself stands out due to the extreme nature of the option (probably the reason why there may not need be a need to read the paragraph to answer such questions)
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
Can someone help with Q18? I was able to successfully eliminate III, so C, D and E options were eliminated. I was stuck in trying to find evidence for I and II in the passage. Although the gist of the passage was about how women crtics' artistic approach is looked down upon, I didn't find any evidence that they would "bring something UNIQUE" to the table.

For II, the last sentence talks about creating a construct a new theory that is somewhere between completely objective and completely artistic/intuitive. So the women critics are indeed creating a new theory that uses elements from both processes.
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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Zohair123 wrote:
Can someone help with Q18? I was able to successfully eliminate III, so C, D and E options were eliminated. I was stuck in trying to find evidence for I and II in the passage. Although the gist of the passage was about how women crtics' artistic approach is looked down upon, I didn't find any evidence that they would "bring something UNIQUE" to the table.

For II, the last sentence talks about creating a construct a new theory that is somewhere between completely objective and completely artistic/intuitive. So the women critics are indeed creating a new theory that uses elements from both processes.


II. They must develop. a new theory of the critical process.

As long as the academic establishment continues to regard objective analysis as "masculine" and an intuitive approach as "feminine," the theoretician must steer a delicate philosophical course between the two. If she wishes to construct a theory of feminist criticism, she would be well advised to place it within the framework of a general theory of the critical process that is neither purely objective nor purely intuitive. Her theory is then more likely to be compared and contrasted with other theories of criticism with some degree of dispassionate distance.

be careful when you handle a question in which you have extreme words.

Must and wishes are very distinct

Regards
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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6/7 correct
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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Swetabh wrote:
6/7 correct


That's a great score.
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
Carcass wrote:
Zohair123 wrote:
Can someone help with Q18? I was able to successfully eliminate III, so C, D and E options were eliminated. I was stuck in trying to find evidence for I and II in the passage. Although the gist of the passage was about how women crtics' artistic approach is looked down upon, I didn't find any evidence that they would "bring something UNIQUE" to the table.

For II, the last sentence talks about creating a construct a new theory that is somewhere between completely objective and completely artistic/intuitive. So the women critics are indeed creating a new theory that uses elements from both processes.


II. They must develop. a new theory of the critical process.

As long as the academic establishment continues to regard objective analysis as "masculine" and an intuitive approach as "feminine," the theoretician must steer a delicate philosophical course between the two. If she wishes to construct a theory of feminist criticism, she would be well advised to place it within the framework of a general theory of the critical process that is neither purely objective nor purely intuitive. Her theory is then more likely to be compared and contrasted with other theories of criticism with some degree of dispassionate distance.

be careful when you handle a question in which you have extreme words.

Must and wishes are very distinct

Regards

But about I , I also don't see unique anything
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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Flashinthepan wrote:
Carcass wrote:
Zohair123 wrote:
Can someone help with Q18? I was able to successfully eliminate III, so C, D and E options were eliminated. I was stuck in trying to find evidence for I and II in the passage. Although the gist of the passage was about how women crtics' artistic approach is looked down upon, I didn't find any evidence that they would "bring something UNIQUE" to the table.

For II, the last sentence talks about creating a construct a new theory that is somewhere between completely objective and completely artistic/intuitive. So the women critics are indeed creating a new theory that uses elements from both processes.


II. They must develop. a new theory of the critical process.

As long as the academic establishment continues to regard objective analysis as "masculine" and an intuitive approach as "feminine," the theoretician must steer a delicate philosophical course between the two. If she wishes to construct a theory of feminist criticism, she would be well advised to place it within the framework of a general theory of the critical process that is neither purely objective nor purely intuitive. Her theory is then more likely to be compared and contrasted with other theories of criticism with some degree of dispassionate distance.

be careful when you handle a question in which you have extreme words.

Must and wishes are very distinct

Regards

But about I , I also don't see unique anything



You may wanna read the last paragraph of the passage again. Specifically, the first few lines.


These questions are political in the sense that the debate over them will inevitably be less an exploration of abstract matters in a spirit of disinterested inquiry than an academic power struggle in which the careers and professional fortunes of many women scholars only now entering the academic profession in substantial numbers-will be at stake, and with them the chances for a

distinctive contribution to humanistic understanding, a contribution that might be an important influence against sexism in our society

.



This implies that the author believes that women are capable of bringing some distinctive to the society.
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
I am confused with the choices of A and D in the last question, number 23. Can anyone please explain it?
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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For ques 23, just take a look at the main idea of political problem mentioned in the para, it says they have academic power struggle(that means someone wants power over the. other). The only option having problem with power is A.
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
I am confused about question 22. Help please!.
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
Why can't choice (C) work for Q22?
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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If she defines feminist criticism as creative and intuitive, privileged as art, then her work becomes vulnerable to the prejudices of stereotypic ideas about the ways in which women think, and will be dismissed by much of the academic establishment. Because of these prejudices


22. Which of the following is most likely to be one of, the "utilitarian political objectives" mentioned by the author ?

(A) To forge a new theory of literary criticism - wrong

(B) To pursue truth in a disinterested manner - wrong

(C) To demonstrate that women are interested in literary criticism that can be viewed either subjectively or objectively - Wrong the can use both of the worlds

(D) To convince the academic establishment to revise the ways in which it assesses women scholars' professional qualities - CORRECT

(E) To dissuade women who are literary critics from taking a subjective approach to literary criticism - Wrong
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
4/7 correct.
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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6/7 correct except Q22.
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
8mins..6/7
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
Got everything right except the 2nd one . Hows it A and not B?
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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aishumurali wrote:
Got everything right except the 2nd one . Hows it A and not B?


see this or ask if still unclear

https://gre.myprepclub.com/forum/is-the-li ... tml#p49361
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Re: Is the literary critic like the poet [#permalink]
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