- Tue Sep 06, 2022 12:00 pm
#97022
Hi arjanlion!
Let's break apart answer choice (E): "passage B uses the term to refer only to musicians employed by nobles whereas passage A uses the term to refer to musicians who have a variety of employment arrangements." This is a must-be-true question, and one specifically asking about differences between the passages.
First, we can test the claim about passage B. Does it use the term griot "to refer only to musicians employed by nobles?" At first, this can seem plausible--one reason is because the passage mentions nobles in the first paragraph in referring to a "high-status noble sector (géer)" (line 40). Then in the second paragraph, the passage connects griots to patrons.
However, these two pieces of information alone don't allow one to infer that these patrons were nobles. The passage refers to "low-status caste groups (ñeeño). Wolof elites of the day ranked ñeeño in six subcastes, the lowest of which was griot" (lines 41-43). Based on this information, it's possible that griots might have patrons who are not members of the noble sector. Given this, answer choice (E) incorrectly describes passage B so would not be the correct answer for this reason alone.
Second, we can still look at the description of passage A: "passage A uses the term to refer to musicians who have a variety of employment arrangements." This description seems possible based on the passage, but not something that must be true. While passage A describes griots as "historians," it doesn't go on to unpack a variety of employment arrangements for their work as historians (such as patronage, public funding, etc.). We therefore also can't verify the information about passage A. This is an additional reason why (E) would be incorrect.
Since (E) doesn't accurately describe how the term is used in either of the passages, it can't correctly describe how the passages differ in using the term.