- Sun Aug 27, 2017 9:00 am
#38870
Why not answer choice (C)? The passage states that most mainstream historians were nationalistic, writing in a way that "prompted the creation of new genealogies of nations, new myths about the inevitability of nations, their 'temperaments,' their destines."
Isn't myth-making and destiny-imbuing making the history of nations seem more glorious than they actually were?
I understand the rationale for (A), more or less, but I thought it was a weaker choice because I thought the passage didn't make clear if the promise of U.S. citizenship wasn't realized for legal/social reasons in the U.S., or because some African Americas identified culturally with the diaspora / an African homeland. If it was the latter, (A) seems like a claim with weak support.
Isn't myth-making and destiny-imbuing making the history of nations seem more glorious than they actually were?
I understand the rationale for (A), more or less, but I thought it was a weaker choice because I thought the passage didn't make clear if the promise of U.S. citizenship wasn't realized for legal/social reasons in the U.S., or because some African Americas identified culturally with the diaspora / an African homeland. If it was the latter, (A) seems like a claim with weak support.