- Fri Aug 11, 2017 2:49 pm
#38190
I was between A and B in this question, and I eventually chose A. I thought that B could be true and thus was not the correct answer based on the following facts: 1) the meaning that a reader gets from a poem is always the result of the reader's system of beliefs and the poem and 2) any two readers from different cultures and eras have radically different sets of beliefs. I thought that based on this, it was still possible for two people from two different eras with different beliefs to extract the same meaning from the poem because the stimulus does not say that a different set of beliefs leads to a different experience with the meaning of the poem. For example, Susie may believe that women should stay at home and take care of the house, while Johnny believes that women should go to work. These are opposing beliefs, but Susie and Johnny may apply their beliefs to the poem in different ways and end up at the same conclusion.
I thought A was correct because the stimulus specifies that the meaning is a "unique result between a reader's system of beliefs and a poem", which I interpreted to mean solely a result of A and B. This would mean that someone else's interpretation of it, factor C, does not have an impact.
Thank you so much for your help.
I thought A was correct because the stimulus specifies that the meaning is a "unique result between a reader's system of beliefs and a poem", which I interpreted to mean solely a result of A and B. This would mean that someone else's interpretation of it, factor C, does not have an impact.
Thank you so much for your help.