- Tue Dec 17, 2019 6:03 pm
#72608
Hi dlehr99!
With this question, we are being asked to glean the basic definition of "the transnational approach" from the passage and find an example of a study in the answer choices below that would fit that approach. As Steve pointed out, from the passage we know that transnational historians were described as "establishing a firm cultural basis for a shared identity" and that these historians' internationalism "posits a diasporic community which...possesses a single culture." So we are looking for a study that looks at some sort of shared cultural basis. The "results" of the studies are irrelevant. Historical studies don't really have the same types of "results" that scientific studies have. It's a transnational approach meaning that it's just the way they study history (the perspective they take). Not what the specific outcome is. All we need is a study in which the historians are attempting to examine a shared cultural history.
Answer choice (E) is the only answer choice that posits a study which would examine a shared cultural history, and so it is the correct answer.
In this question, we are not using the passage to try to prove anything about African American culture, nor are we trying to affect any arguments in our passage. We are simply looking for an example of a transnational approach--an approach that examines shared cultural history.
Also, African Americans are Americans of African descent. So when we're talking about their shared cultural history, it's the history of their African ancestors. Technically, sure, you could have African Americans who are living abroad in Thailand or Spain or Africa...but their cultural history would still be that of their ancestors. I might not be fully understanding the point you were trying to make there so let us know if you need further clarification!
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey