Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.
Customized for You
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Track Your Progress
every week, we’ll send you an estimated GRE score based on your performance
Practice Pays
we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Thank you for using the timer!
We noticed you are actually not timing your practice. Click the START button first next time you use the timer.
There are many benefits to timing your practice, including:
Your score will improve and your results will be more realistic
Is there something wrong with our timer?Let us know!
In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted with three different yardsticks by which to measure her work. We could consider her poems as the product of a twentieth-century artist in the tradition of James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and Wallace Stevens. However, to do so would be to ignore a facet that informs every word she writes and that stems from her identity as a woman. Yet, to characterize her solely as a woman poet is to deny her cultural heritage, for Mona Feather is also the first modern poet of stature who is also an American Indian.
Stanley Wilson has argued compellingly that the huge popularity Feather enjoys among the Indian reservation school population of the United States is creating a whole new generation of poetry enthusiasts in an age when the reading of poetry is on the wane. While this is undoubtedly true, Mr. Wilson’s praise gives the impression that Feather’s readership is limited to her own culture—an impression which hints that Mr. Wilson is himself measuring her by only one criterion. Radical feminist writers have long found in Feather’s poetry a sense of self-pride which strikes a chord with their own more political philosophies. Her imagery, which always made use of the early Native American traditions in which the woman had an important role, was seen as the awakened sensibility of a kindred spirit.
Yet for all the “feminist” touches in her writing, it would be a disservice to consign Feather to the ranks of politicized writers, for her message is deeper than that. The despair that characterized twentieth-century modern poets is to be found in Mona Feather’s work as well; she writes of the American Indians of the 1930s confined to ever-shrinking reservations and finds in that a metaphor for all of modern mankind trapped on a shrinking earth of limited resources.
Question 1
00:00
A
B
C
D
E
Question Stats:
73% (02:22) correct
27% (02:23) wrong based on 140 sessions
HideShow
timer Statistics
The primary purpose of the passage is to
A) describe the work of Mona Feather B) compare Feather with Joyce, Eliot, and Stevens C) show Feather’s roots in her Native American heritage D) argue that Mona Feather’s work can be looked at in several different ways E) discuss the women’s movement in America
Question 2
00:00
A
B
C
D
E
Question Stats:
82% (00:51) correct
18% (01:43) wrong based on 79 sessions
HideShow
timer Statistics
The passage implies that the author believes Stanley Wilson’s view of Feather is
A) a compelling and complete assessment of her work B) focused too much on her status as a Native American poet C) meant to disguise his opinion of Feather as a poet lacking in talent D) critical of Native American children’s literary judgment E) based on all major themes and images in her poetry
Question 3
00:00
A
B
C
D
E
Question Stats:
53% (01:14) correct
47% (01:21) wrong based on 85 sessions
HideShow
timer Statistics
The author mentions James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and Wallace Stevens in order to
A) compare the political messages in Feather’s work to those in the work of other authors B) highlight the radical differences between male and female poets in the twentieth century C) contrast Feather’s thematic choices with those of her contemporaries D) enumerate a list of artists whose sensibilities made them Feather’s kindred spirits E) describe a critical context in which Feather’s work can be analyzed
Re: In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted
[#permalink]
18 Aug 2019, 20:19
2
1. Option D is correct and that is what the passage is all about.
2. “Mr. Wilson’s praise gives the impression that Feather’s readership is limited to her own culture—an impression which hints that Mr. Wilson is himself measuring her by only one criterion.” This was mentioned in the passage. According to this sentence we can say that option B is correct.
3. The passage is all about analysing Feather’s work, so option E matches here.
Re: In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted
[#permalink]
19 Jun 2022, 04:34
The author mentions James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and Wallace Stevens in order to
A) compare the political messages in Feather’s work to those in the work of other authors B) highlight the radical differences between male and female poets in the twentieth century C) contrast Feather’s thematic choices with those of her contemporaries D) enumerate a list of artists whose sensibilities made them Feather’s kindred spirits E) describe a critical context in which Feather’s work can be analyzed
Re: In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted
[#permalink]
20 Jun 2022, 01:09
1
Expert Reply
In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted with three different yardsticks by which to measure her work.We could consider her poems as the product of a twentieth-century artist in the tradition of James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and Wallace Stevens.
So far so good
However, to do so would be to ignore a facet that informs every word she writes and that stems from her identity as a woman. Yet, to characterize her solely as a woman poet is to deny her cultural heritage, for Mona Feather is also the first modern poet of stature who is also an American Indian.
The part above shows a critic that the three authors above say is just part of the entire story. We do not have a confrontation as described in C
Re: In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted
[#permalink]
28 Jun 2022, 14:12
Carcass, can you please explain why D is not correct for Q3? According to the passage, We could consider her poems as the product of a twentieth-century artist in the tradition of James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and Wallace Stevens. Does it mean that F's poems and poems of other writers included in the list should be related?
Re: In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted
[#permalink]
28 Jun 2022, 15:18
Expert Reply
I believe these passages are good but they have some sort of inconsistency. An official passage and the questions related to it do not have any room for some sort of interpretation- I.e. no doubts. Four answers are wrong and one is right
However, in this specific case I do not see any doubt that D is wrong
In analyzing the poetry of Mona Feather, we are confronted with three different yardsticks by which to measure her work. We could consider her poems as the product of a twentieth-century artist in the tradition of James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, and Wallace Stevens.
From the portion highlighted we have a clear context to extrapolate her style and work in confronting of the classic there authors of the period. That's why we do have the yardsticks and the tradition. Both signal a context or a frame
D) enumerate a list of artists whose sensibilities made them Feather’s kindred spirits