- Mon May 28, 2018 7:03 pm
#45987
Hi,
For this question, I originally put A as my answer after having eliminated B,C, and D. In hindsight, I understand that A was too much of an extrapolation to be a valid answer (Satiric art forms are not necessarily always often among the first to cross racial/cultural divisions), but I'm having trouble finding where in the passage answer E is supported.
While going through the work, I understood that Walker continued to modify the dance to appeal to multiple communities, but don't understand how to make the jump from that interpretation to having the cakewalk "bolster their social identities."
Thanks!
For this question, I originally put A as my answer after having eliminated B,C, and D. In hindsight, I understand that A was too much of an extrapolation to be a valid answer (Satiric art forms are not necessarily always often among the first to cross racial/cultural divisions), but I'm having trouble finding where in the passage answer E is supported.
While going through the work, I understood that Walker continued to modify the dance to appeal to multiple communities, but don't understand how to make the jump from that interpretation to having the cakewalk "bolster their social identities."
Thanks!