- Sun May 01, 2022 10:33 pm
#95119
I have to disagree with you about answer C, TheySeeMeRolin - I think it is a HUGE leap to say author A would say there is NO scholarly value in defining genres. "No scholarly value" would mean that there is nothing to be gained - zero - in the attempt. They just don't take a position anywhere near that strong! They think that genre is more about how you read a work, rather than how it is written, but they still might see some value in demarking genres.
And author B is actually okay with demarking the boundaries of genres, but thinks it should be done based on reading protocol, and acknowledges that there will be borderline cases and cases that are more central to a genre. Author B would therefore likely disagree with answer C, so it cannot be a point of agreement between the authors.
But here is the evidence that A would agree with answer E:
Last line: "what unites works belonging to the same genre is the way those works are read, rather than, say, a set of formal elements found within the works."
In other words, if two works with the same formal elements can be read in different ways, they can be in different genres.
And here's evidence that B would also have to agree:
Middle of the first paragraph: "A more fruitful way to characterize the distinction between genres is to view it as a distinction between reading protocols...We are free to read any text by any reading protocol we wish."
So if you can read anything using any protocol, and reading protocol determines genre, then two very similar works COULD be seen as belonging to different genres.
Thus, both authors would have to agree that two similar works could belong to different genres, so long as they could be read in different ways from each other.
Also, notice how much easier it is to support an answer about what could be true (answer E) than one that is so very, very certain (like answer C).
I hope that helps! Thanks for asking! This thread has so far been primarily about the wrong answers, so it's nice to talk about what makes the right one right!
Adam M. Tyson
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