- Thu Jun 10, 2021 1:44 pm
#87774
It is the line at the end of the first paragraph of Passage B that answers all of your questions, Tajadas and ToadKing and appletree.:
And this line helps us reject answer B because it start with the word "But," which tells us it is a counterclaim to the previous sentence. Sure, we can read anything however we want, but writing in a certain way to exploit certain reading protocols is what defines a genre, and those protocols are very much about the expectations of the reader and not only what the author wants to create. After all, we are talking about reading protocols, not writing protocols. They are about catering to or interacting with the reader. Science Fiction is therefore written in a way that will show differences between our world and the imagined world in the story because that is what the reader of Sci Fi expects. Poetry will be written with phonic aspects in mind because that is what the reader of poetry expects. The expectations of the reader ARE a guiding force in selecting the reading protocol, which is what determines genre. Thus, answer B is an opposite answer. Pay attention to that "but" to see that shift.
But the texts most central to a genre are those texts that were clearly written to exploit a particular protocol—texts that yield a particularly rich reading experience when read according to one protocol rather than another.This supports answer A, because if the most central works of a genre are those written to exploit a particular protocol, then the borderline cases (not central, but out on the fringe somewhere) would be those that are not written with a particular protocol in mind. Tajadas, is it possible you missed the word "not" in that answer choice?
And this line helps us reject answer B because it start with the word "But," which tells us it is a counterclaim to the previous sentence. Sure, we can read anything however we want, but writing in a certain way to exploit certain reading protocols is what defines a genre, and those protocols are very much about the expectations of the reader and not only what the author wants to create. After all, we are talking about reading protocols, not writing protocols. They are about catering to or interacting with the reader. Science Fiction is therefore written in a way that will show differences between our world and the imagined world in the story because that is what the reader of Sci Fi expects. Poetry will be written with phonic aspects in mind because that is what the reader of poetry expects. The expectations of the reader ARE a guiding force in selecting the reading protocol, which is what determines genre. Thus, answer B is an opposite answer. Pay attention to that "but" to see that shift.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam