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Re: Literary historians today have rejected conventional analyses of the d [#permalink]
Option A is wrong because it says something which is consistent with the argument. The argument speaks of the development of the English renaissance drama were renaissance is an era. It can be inferred that before the renaissance era, England had dramatic traditions; otherwise the argument may have talked about the development of drama during the renaissance period, and not only about a particular drama style during the renaissance period.

Option E is the right one because it is clearly inconsistent with the argument. The argument says "They no longer accept the idea that the sudden achievement of Elizabethan playwrights was a historical anomaly, a sort of magical rediscovery of ancient Greek dramatic form applied to contemporary English subject matter. Instead, most students of the theater now view Elizabethan drama as being organically related to traditional local drama, particularly medieval morality plays." But Option E goes directly against this passage of the argument.
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Re: Literary historians today have rejected conventional analyses of the d [#permalink]
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