csaluja
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Hi Experts, I was wondering if one of you could please clarify my doubts on the following questions. Would greatly appreciate it!
Let's go through your questions one at a time:
Question 2
csaluja
Q2: I am not able to see why option C is correct. I choose option D instead because of this particular line from the passage "Such an appreciation now appears irrelevant as well as polemical in its incompleteness". Isn't the author doubting on the mentioned qualities?
Take another look at the piece of the passage relevant to question 2:
Quote:
"appreciation of her style was limited by prevailing convention to an isolation of its supposedly feminine qualities: “great spontaneity, exquisite grace, marvelously fine taste.” Such an appreciation now appears irrelevant as well as polemical in its incompleteness
In saying "
supposedly feminine qualities", the author is not doubting that Strozzi's music contains the listed qualities. She is doubting
that those qualities are feminine. The word "supposedly" shows that the author disagrees with the prevailing views of Strozzi's works because they were limited by a gender-biased viewpoint. This is expressed in answer choice (C):
Quote:
the author disagrees with the judgment she is discussing.
Answer (C) is correct for question 2.
With this analysis in mind, read answer choice (D):
Quote:
The author does not believe that Strozzi’s music has the qualities cited in the quotation.
The author states that earlier appreciation of Strozzi's music was "irrelevant and polemical in its incompleteness." This is different than stating that the music did not actually contain the cited qualities-- it just means that the author considers a sole focus on the music's "supposedly feminine qualities" to be an incomplete evaluation of Strozzi's work. (D) is out.
Question 8
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Q8: I am not able to understand why option A is correct? My main confusion is how can we deduce from line 53-54 that strozzi’s works are self-revealing? I was able to understand that her songs expressed less feelings of the fictive characters that she created than her own but I am not able to see how we can deduce that her songs were "self revealing"? I opted for option C instead.
Let's take another look at the quote in question, along with its context in the passage:
Quote:
She is not a composer of dramatic works; her songs are addressed to a more intimate audience, expressing less the feeling of fictive characters than her own: “These harmonic notes,” she writes, “are the language of the soul, and instruments of the heart.”
Here, the author sets up a comparison between Strozzi's music and that of her contemporaries. The two points of comparison in this section are:
- Strozzi's work addresses a more intimate audience, and
- Strozzi's music expresses more of her own feelings, whereas the music of her contemporaries expresses more the feelings of fictive characters
Take a look at answer choice (C) in light of this comparison:
Quote:
(C) [The author of the passage quotes Barbara Strozzi... most probably in order to] Illustrate Strozzi’s confident approach to her art
From the above analysis, we can see that the quote has nothing to do with confidence. We also do not know if the author would consider intimate and self-expressive music more or less confident than the dramatic works of Strozzi's contemporaries. We can eliminate (C).
Now, here is answer choice (A):
Quote:
(A) [The author of the passage quotes Barbara Strozzi... most probably in order to] support the claim that Strozzi’s works are self-revealing.
This is a good fit, because Strozzi's music expresses "
her own feelings," in contrast to the music of her contemporaries, which expresses the feelings of fictive characters. (A) is the correct answer for question 8.
Question 9
csaluja
Q9: I was confused between option A and C and ended up picking option A instead. In the paragraph we are given "Born in 1619 in Venice, she grew up in the home of Giulio Strozzi....Similarly, Francesca Caccini was the daughter of professional musicians and therefore exposed to music for infancy". I chose option A solely because of the word "similarly". The passage states that "similarly" FC was the daughter of the professional musicians. Can't we deduce based on the word "similarly" that BS was the daughter of GS?
For answer choice (A) to be correct, we would need to know "the
exact family relationship between Giulio Strozzi and Barbara Strozzi." From the passage, we know that Strozzi "grew up in the home of Giulio Strozzi, a renowned poet" which "guaranteed her and early and full exposure to Venetian musical and literary society." This is compared to Francesca Caccini, who "was the daughter of professional musicians and therefore exposed to music from infancy." The author concludes that "this parallel suggests that
such an environment may have been essential for the development of a female composer."
In saying that the situations of the two composers are "similar," the author is highlighting that both women had
early exposure to music, not that they were both the daughters of prominent musicians. This is clear from the phrase "such an environment."
The passage only tells us that Barbara grew up in Giulio's house, which absolutely does not tell us the exact family relationship between the two. Maybe Giulio is her grandfather, or her uncle, or her cousin. Maybe they have the same last name but aren't related at all! The point is, we don't know based on the passage. We cannot infer the exact relationship between Barbara and Giulio Strozzi, so (A) is out.
The evidence for (C), on the other hand, is strong: Strozzi " achieved some measure of
public recognition" for her work, and therefore her "compositions [were] known to her contemporaries." (C) is the right answer for question 9.
I hope that helps!