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Sajjad1994
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Official Explanation

1. The primary purpose of the passage is to

Difficulty Level: Vary Hard

Explanation

The passage describes the role of Alcott’s women in their society and briefly wonders about the author’s motivation.

(A) concerns only the last sentence of the passage.

(B) and (D) ignore that the passage discusses a novel rather than reality. (D) is also too broad and somewhat nonsensical since the passage concerns the past.

(E) misses the author’s tone — there is no indictment, merely a discussion.

Answer: C
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Wait a minute, wait a minute. The passage says " The family dynamics of Little Women, as a microcosm of the larger society"
If the family dynamics represent a "microcosm" of the larger society, then the second statement must also be true. So all three statements seem correct to me.


Sajjad1994
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Hi Sajjad1994,

Can you please post the OE for Q3?

Thanks.

Official Explanation

3. The passage implies which of the following about American society at the time that Little Women depicts?

Difficulty Level: 750

Explanation

The first statement is justified, as the first sentence states that the man of the house was at the warfront. The third statement must follow, because the passage states that men went out in public to conduct activities and returned home at night. The second statement, while quite possibly true, is not mentioned in the passage. The passage only states that Alcott glorified this condition in her novel, not that the entire society did so. Do not bring in outside information or make assumptions!

Answer: C
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Sajjad1994


Official Explanation

1. The primary purpose of the passage is to

Difficulty Level: Vary Hard

Explanation

The passage describes the role of Alcott’s women in their society and briefly wonders about the author’s motivation.

(A) concerns only the last sentence of the passage.

(B) and (D) ignore that the passage discusses a novel rather than reality. (D) is also too broad and somewhat nonsensical since the passage concerns the past.

(E) misses the author’s tone — there is no indictment, merely a discussion.

Answer: C
Can you please explain why not B in detail?
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Vibhatu
Can you please explain why not B in detail?

Hi Vibhatu

Option (B) Is narrow in scope and ill directed. If the purpose were simply to "detail the domestic confinement," the passage would likely include historical context, statistics, or diaries from real women of the era. Instead, the passage remains tightly focused on Alcott's fictional representation and what that representation implies about society (the microcosm). Hence option (B) is incorrect.
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Explanations for Q.1?
How is the passage "analyzing sociological implications of a work of art"? Which statement in the passage suggests that?
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Sajjad1994
Lousia May Alcott’s Little Women opens to a common scenario—the women knitting at home and waiting for news from the man of the family, who is at the war front. The family dynamics of Little Women, as a microcosm of the larger society, are marked by explicitly articulated male dominance. First of all, the division of labor has it so that women are confined to the domestic sphere while men step into the public sphere and engage in activities there, returning to the domestic sphere at night to be cared for by their spouse or female children. Alcott describes the character of Meg, a young wife, as “often ... lonely,” with her husband “absent till night, and nothing to do but sew, or read, or potter about.”

Marmee later tells Meg that she ought to “take [her] part in the world’s work,” even though she is a woman. Ultimately, however, “taking her part in the world’s work” meant no more than talking to her husband about politics whilst remaining at home, allowing him to continue to be the mediator between Meg’s individuality and the world at large. Chapter 38 of the novel wraps up the issue by concluding that “a woman’s happiest kingdom is home, her highest honor the art of ruling it [as a] wise wife and mother,” such position being “the sort of shelf on which young wives and mothers may consent to be laid, safe from the restless fret and fever of the world.” Some have read Alcott’s romantic glorification of women’s confinement as sarcastic, but either way, her loving readers must have agreed with the statement, for the novel has never been out of print.

1. The primary purpose of the passage is to

The passage uses Little Women to show how the novel portrays male dominance and women’s confinement to the home, and it treats the family as a small model of the broader society, noting that the book’s lasting popularity suggests many readers accepted that message.

(A) explain the continued popularity of a novel

Popularity is mentioned only at the end as a supporting point. The passage is not mainly explaining why the book stayed popular; it is mainly analyzing what the book is saying about gender roles.

(B) detail the domestic confinement of 19th century women

The passage discusses confinement, but it does so by interpreting how the novel depicts it and what that implies. It is not a general historical overview of real life women; it is an interpretation of the novel.

(C) analyze the sociological implications of a work of art

This matches best. The passage treats the novel as a “microcosm” of society and draws conclusions about social structure, gender roles, and ideology based on how the story frames women’s place. That is the main job the passage is doing.

(D) argue for the emancipation of women

The passage criticizes confinement, but it does not argue for a program or call to action. It analyzes and evaluates a portrayal; it is not advocating emancipation directly.

(E) indict the politics of a literary work

The tone is critical, but “indict” implies a more direct charge or takedown of the book’s politics. The passage also leaves room for ambiguity (sarcastic or not), which is more consistent with analysis than with outright indictment.

Answer: (C)
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