Last visit was: 24 Apr 2026, 02:19 It is currently 24 Apr 2026, 02:19
Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
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 GMAT 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.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
User avatar
coreyander
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 31 May 2020
Last visit: 11 Jun 2024
Posts: 167
Own Kudos:
1,166
 [76]
Given Kudos: 47
Location: India
Posts: 167
Kudos: 1,166
 [76]
5
Kudos
Add Kudos
70
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Most Helpful Reply
User avatar
Harsh9676
Joined: 18 Sep 2018
Last visit: 27 Feb 2023
Posts: 239
Own Kudos:
228
 [8]
Given Kudos: 322
Location: India
Concentration: Finance, International Business
GMAT 1: 690 Q49 V36
GPA: 3.72
WE:Investment Banking (Finance: Investment Banking)
Products:
GMAT 1: 690 Q49 V36
Posts: 239
Kudos: 228
 [8]
7
Kudos
Add Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
General Discussion
avatar
LipsaTripathy
Joined: 03 Jun 2020
Last visit: 01 Oct 2021
Posts: 5
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 18
Posts: 5
Kudos: 3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
User avatar
bM22
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 05 May 2016
Last visit: 17 Jul 2025
Posts: 522
Own Kudos:
806
 [4]
Given Kudos: 1,316
Location: India
Products:
Posts: 522
Kudos: 806
 [4]
4
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
LipsaTripathy
Hello,
Can anyone please give an explanation to question 3 and question 4.
Thanks.

Hi LipsaTripathy,


3) Which of the following best expresses the meaning of “imperious” in the highlighted text?

A) Righteous
B) Objective
C) Exclusive
D) Royal
E) Arrogant


Correct Answer: E,
Explanation: Let's try it using elimination technique. Author says: "But even at its most moralistic, documentary photography was always imperious in another sense.Both detached traveler’s report and the more forthright angry muckraking reflect the urge to appropriate an exotic reality.", implying that on one hand, the photography was used to highlight important issues, so that they could be resolved, on the other, it did reflect an urge to publicize scandalous realities, which in turn implies, that we are looking for a word which is not similar in sentiment to moralistic, thus reducing our options to just arrogant, making E a better choice.
Also arrogant is a synonym of imperious.


4) It can be inferred that the author calls photography predatory because it

A) changes the reality that the photographer studies
B) exposes the inner secrets of its subjects
C) attempts to create beautiful images to enrich the human environment
D) reduces its subjects to their momentary appearance
E) distorts the natural environment on which the photographer depends

Correct Answer : A,
Explanation: can be inferred from the lines: "The predatory side of photography is at the heart of the alliance between photography and tourism. ..............The tourists invaded the Indians’ privacy, photographing sacred dances and places, paying the Indians to pose, and making them so self-conscious that they revised their ceremonies."
Options B, D: incorrect, as not discussed in the passage.
Option C, E: incorrect, as not true w.r.t what's mentioned about predatory photography.


Hope this Helps.
Thanks.
User avatar
Harsh2111s
Joined: 08 May 2019
Last visit: 10 Feb 2021
Posts: 282
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 54
Location: India
Concentration: Operations, Marketing
GPA: 4
WE:Manufacturing and Production (Manufacturing)
Products:
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Quote:
1) Which of the following sentences would most likely follow the last sentence of the passage?

A) The photographic image is only superficially realistic and depends for its effect mainly on formal relations of light and shade.
B) The photographer’s primary motive is impatience for change; his stock-in-trade is the temporary moment.
C) Photography is inimical to history, because the eye is inimical to the understanding mind.
D) A photograph cannot truly depict the object whose image it catches.
E) The photographer both loots and preserves, denounces and consecrates.
VeritasKarishma GMATNinja
How to eliminate option C and how E is correct ?
User avatar
bM22
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 05 May 2016
Last visit: 17 Jul 2025
Posts: 522
Own Kudos:
806
 [3]
Given Kudos: 1,316
Location: India
Products:
Posts: 522
Kudos: 806
 [3]
2
Kudos
Add Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Harsh2111s
Quote:
1) Which of the following sentences would most likely follow the last sentence of the passage?

A) The photographic image is only superficially realistic and depends for its effect mainly on formal relations of light and shade.
B) The photographer’s primary motive is impatience for change; his stock-in-trade is the temporary moment.
C) Photography is inimical to history, because the eye is inimical to the understanding mind.
D) A photograph cannot truly depict the object whose image it catches.
E) The photographer both loots and preserves, denounces and consecrates.
VeritasKarishma GMATNinja
How to eliminate option C and how E is correct ?


Hi Harsh2111s,

Let me know if this helps.

The last 2 paras of the passage discuss the predatory side of photography and how it impacted the American Indians. The author goes on to discuss how the tourists invaded the privacy of Indians and photographed their ceremonies, making Indians, so conscious that they had to revise certain of their rituals. This change in native rituals is not very different from the changes that occur when a city scandal is photographed, implying that photography could be used for better or worse.

Now the sentence that to follow the last para, should be the one that implies that photography could be both boon and bane, depending on how its used. On one hand it could cause changes in native rituals, and on the other, it could help awaken social conscience by revealing some of the worst scandals in most apt way, thus making E, the correct answer.

Option C is incorrect. It would have been true if more focus was given on the ritual modifications or some other example providing more information about photography has impacted history, but in the last para it is combined with an argument of how photography has influenced in causing changes by revealing some of the worst scandals, there by showing us two sides of the same coin.


Thanks.
User avatar
Hea234ven
Joined: 12 Jul 2019
Last visit: 20 Sep 2021
Posts: 61
Own Kudos:
45
 [1]
Given Kudos: 678
Status:No knowledge goes waste
Location: Norway
Concentration: Finance, Economics
GPA: 3.3
WE:Corporate Finance (Commercial Banking)
Posts: 61
Kudos: 45
 [1]
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Regarding the last question, the word 'predatory' means looting something (implies that breaking privacy). So how can 'predatory' relate to 'changing the reality'?
User avatar
bM22
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 05 May 2016
Last visit: 17 Jul 2025
Posts: 522
Own Kudos:
806
 [2]
Given Kudos: 1,316
Location: India
Products:
Posts: 522
Kudos: 806
 [2]
2
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Hea234ven
Regarding the last question, the word 'predatory' means looting something (implies that breaking privacy). So how can 'predatory' relate to 'changing the reality'?


Hi Hea234ven,

The word Predatory is mentioned in the passage, w.r.t :

1. How the tourists invaded the privacy of the Indians, photographing sacred dances and places, making them so self conscious, that Indians had to revise certain ceremonies.
2. How photography helped(example present in the passage) awakening social conscience by revealing some of the worst scandals.

These change in rituals and changes because of revelation of scandals are being referred to as the change in reality here.


Hope this Helps.
Thanks.
User avatar
nikitathegreat
Joined: 16 Dec 2021
Last visit: 15 Apr 2026
Posts: 176
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 110
Location: India
GMAT 1: 630 Q45 V31
Products:
GMAT 1: 630 Q45 V31
Posts: 176
Kudos: 23
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Can someone explain Q4 - GMATNinja
User avatar
GMATNinja
User avatar
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
Joined: 13 Aug 2009
Last visit: 23 Apr 2026
Posts: 7,391
Own Kudos:
70,809
 [1]
Given Kudos: 2,131
Status: GMAT/GRE/LSAT tutors
Location: United States (CO)
GMAT 1: 780 Q51 V46
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Posts: 7,391
Kudos: 70,809
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post

Question 4


nikitathegreat
Can someone explain Q4 - GMATNinja
­We're given an explanation of the predatory side of photography in paragraph three, where we see a discussion about the relationship between photography and tourism, giving the exploitation of American Indians as an example. It then concludes with a line about how tourists served to change the very ceremonies they photographed by making the participants self-conscious.

(A) does a decent job of capturing this idea. If an American Indian ceremony was one thing before a nosy tourist photographed it, and then something else afterwards, it stands to reason that photography is changing reality, right?

And the others don't even come close to addressing anything mentioned in the passage about predatory photography. So (A) appears to be the best of the bunch.

I hope that helps!­
User avatar
Ilanchezhiyan
Joined: 09 Feb 2024
Last visit: 20 Apr 2026
Posts: 88
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 161
Posts: 88
Kudos: 21
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Why can't the answer for Qn. 4 be option B ? I understand it changes reality. But as the underlined excerpt from the para below suggests,
"The tourists invaded the Indians’ privacy, photographing sacred dances and places, paying the Indians to pose, and making them so self-conscious that they revised their ceremonies."
it exposed their secrets?
User avatar
PeachSnapple1
User avatar
Yale and Darden Moderator
Joined: 17 Mar 2021
Last visit: 23 Apr 2026
Posts: 135
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 1
GMAT 1: 740 Q50 V40
GMAT 1: 740 Q50 V40
Posts: 135
Kudos: 109
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Very good question! I fell for B myself. I got to B after reading [photographing sacred dances and places.] My thought was, if those are considered sacred, it means those dances and places are kinda an inner secret to the Indians. And if anyone took a picture of those sacred dances and places somehow, he/she may expose those images by sharing them online or with friends, thus exposing the Indians' inner secret. Furthermore, A says [changes the reality that the photographer studies] - the part [change the reality] caught me off guard as I believe that if I change something, the outcome is still a part of my reality. I mean, from a philosophical standpoint, no one can really change the reality - they can only change the expectation, the tradition, the policy, etc. Well, unless you have the Izanagi skill from the Sharingan from the Manga series Naruto.

Anyway, thank you for being patient with my rambling. I swear sometimes I am just not convinced with some of the explanations in some of the GMAT answers, but oh well.
Anyway, here is the OG explanation for B [In its discussion of the predatory nature of photography, the passage mentions invasions of privacy, and it suggests that some of what the photographers photographed may have been secret, but it does not indicate that they exposed people’s inner secrets.] So apparently, in B, [exposes the inner secrets of its subjects] means that you have to expose the deep down secret from people. So merely invading the privacy might not mean the same thing, nor does photographing sacred dances and places (it turns out that sacred does not mean inner secret...)

That's the best I can do, hope you find some of it useful.
Ilanchezhiyan
Why can't the answer for Qn. 4 be option B ? I understand it changes reality. But as the underlined excerpt from the para below suggests,
"The tourists invaded the Indians’ privacy, photographing sacred dances and places, paying the Indians to pose, and making them so self-conscious that they revised their ceremonies."
it exposed their secrets?
User avatar
PeachSnapple1
User avatar
Yale and Darden Moderator
Joined: 17 Mar 2021
Last visit: 23 Apr 2026
Posts: 135
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 1
GMAT 1: 740 Q50 V40
GMAT 1: 740 Q50 V40
Posts: 135
Kudos: 109
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
The last paragraph is kinda convoluted [But native ceremonies that are changed by the tourists are not so different from a city scandal that is corrected because someone photographs it. In so far as the muckrakers got results, they too altered what they photographed; indeed, photographing reality was one way of altering it.] Why must the GMAT write it this way...

By [a city scandal that is corrected because someone photographs it], does it mean after a photographer capture a photo exposing a city scandal - whatever that means, the scandal will gather attention from the public and cease to exist, like in the second paragraph [his photographs of children working in mills in the 1910s helped make child labor illegal]?

But why would the muckrakers (a kind of journalist who exposes corruption and scandal) alter what they photographed? Does that mean that they took a picture of whatever, then "photoshopped" it to serve their agenda, i.e. to expose a child labor in a city by making the photos more dramatic. Don't the last two sentences of the second paragraph say [the more forthright angry muckraking reflect the urge to appropriate an exotic reality. And no reality is allowed the right to resist appropriation, whether it is scandalous or beautiful or picturesque.]? Doesn't it mean that the journalist will capture the reality, no matter how ugly or beautiful, without 'photoshopping' to ultimately show what the world really likes?

In short, the second paragraph says the muckrakers capture the true reality, but then the last sentence says the muckrakers altered what they photographed. Those two details kinda trip me off, or maybe I'm just overthinking, or maybe I'm missing a point.
User avatar
GMATNinja
User avatar
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
Joined: 13 Aug 2009
Last visit: 23 Apr 2026
Posts: 7,391
Own Kudos:
70,809
 [1]
Given Kudos: 2,131
Status: GMAT/GRE/LSAT tutors
Location: United States (CO)
GMAT 1: 780 Q51 V46
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Posts: 7,391
Kudos: 70,809
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post

Question 4


Ilanchezhiyan
Why can't the answer for Qn. 4 be option B ? I understand it changes reality. But as the underlined excerpt from the para below suggests,

"The tourists invaded the Indians’ privacy, photographing sacred dances and places, paying the Indians to pose, and making them so self-conscious that they revised their ceremonies."

it exposed their secrets?
(B) is tempting, but invading a group's privacy isn't necessarily the same as exposing their inner secrets. For example, photographing celebrities while on vacation certainly invades their privacy without exposing their inner secrets.

Also, invasion of privacy is only part of the author's description of photography's predatory side. There's the invasion of privacy, the direct manipulation of reality (paying the subjects to pose), and the indirect altering of reality (making them so self-conscious that they revised their ceremonies).

The fact that American photographers are altering reality, directly and indirectly, for their own benefit (getting a "goal shot") is what makes it predatory, so (A) is a better fit.

For more on (A), check out this post: https://gmatclub.com/forum/photography- ... l#p3385829.
User avatar
rak08
Joined: 01 Feb 2025
Last visit: 22 Apr 2026
Posts: 268
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 405
Location: India
GPA: 7.14
Posts: 268
Kudos: 28
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Q2 OA explanation please
User avatar
guddo
Joined: 25 May 2021
Last visit: 23 Apr 2026
Posts: 1,014
Own Kudos:
11,331
 [1]
Given Kudos: 32
Posts: 1,014
Kudos: 11,331
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Quote:
Photography in Europe was largely guided by the notions of the picturesque, the important, and the beautiful. Americans, less convinced of the permanence of any basic social arrangements, experts on the “reality” of change, have more often made photography partisan. Pictures were taken not only to show what should be admired but to reveal what needs to be confronted and fixed up. American photography implies a less stable relation with history; and a relation to social reality that is both more hopeful and more predatory.

The hopeful side is exemplified in the use of photographs in America to awaken conscience. Lewis W. Hine was appointed staff photographer to the National Child Labor Committee, which was preparing to recommend legislation; his photographs of children working in mills in the 1910s helped make child labor illegal. In the case of Roy Stryker’s Farm Security Administration project, the camera was a way of “learning” about the rural poor, so the New Deal bureaucrats could figure out how to help them. But even at its most moralistic, documentary photography was always imperious in another sense. Both detached traveler’s report and the more forthright angry muckraking reflect the urge to appropriate an exotic reality. And no reality is allowed the right to resist appropriation, whether it is scandalous or beautiful or picturesque.

The predatory side of photography is at the heart of the alliance between photography and tourism. The case of the American Indians is the most brutal. Discreet, serious amateurs had been operating since the end of the Civil War; the opening wedge of an army of tourists eager for “a goal shot” of Indian life. The tourists invaded the Indians’ privacy, photographing sacred dances and places, paying the Indians to pose, and making them so self-conscious that they revised their ceremonies.

But native ceremonies that are changed by the tourists are not so different from a city scandal that is corrected because someone photographs it. In so far as the muckrakers got results, they too altered what they photographed; indeed, photographing reality was one way of altering it.

4. It can be inferred that the author calls photography predatory because it

European photography tended to focus on what is picturesque, important, and beautiful. The passage contrasts that with American photography, which more often tries to expose social problems and push for change. It then says that even when American documentary photography is morally motivated, it can still be “imperious” because it treats people and places as something to be taken and used, not something that can resist being captured.

(A) changes the reality that the photographer studies

This is not supported. The passage does not discuss European photographers shaping American photographers, it mainly uses Europe as a contrast.

(B) exposes the inner secrets of its subjects

This is partly true as background, but it is too broad for the primary purpose. The passage uses the Europe vs America contrast mainly to set up a deeper point about what American photography implies.

(C) attempts to create beautiful images to enrich the human environment

This is too narrow. Influencing legislation is just one example (Hine) used to illustrate a broader claim.

(D) reduces its subjects to their momentary appearance

This matches best. The passage is mainly about the attitudes implied by American photography, including its moral hopefulness and its more predatory, appropriating side.

(E) distorts the natural environment on which the photographer depends

This is also too narrow and incomplete. Poverty appears as one example (FSA), but the passage is not mainly about proving poverty exists.

Answer: (D)
Moderators:
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
7391 posts
501 posts
358 posts