Professor Chan: The literature department’s undergraduate courses should cover only true literary works, and not such frivolous material as advertisements.
Professor Wigmore: Advertisements might or might not be true literary works but they do have a powerfully detrimental effect on society—largely because people cannot discern their real messages. The literature department’s courses give students the critical skills to analyze and understand texts. Therefore, it is the literature department’s responsibility to include the study of advertisements in its undergraduate courses.
Which one of the following is an assumption on which Professor Wigmore’s argument depends?
(A) Texts that are true literary works
never have a detrimental effect on society. - WRONG. Situation reversal need not to be true.
(B) Courses offered by the literature department
cannot include both true literary works and material such as advertisement. - WRONG. Goes contrary to the passage.
(C) Students who take courses in the literature department
do not get from those courses other skills besides those needed to analyze and understand texts. - WRONG. Irrelevant in reality but it is confusing and thus takes time to get eliminated.
(D) Forms of advertising that convey their message entirely
through visual images do not have a detrimental effect on society. - WRONG. Conditionality that has no effect actually.
(E) The literature department’s
responsibility is not limited to teaching students how to analyze true literary works. - CORRECT. If there's a limitation then passage fails to stand as it is.
Answer E.