- Thu Jan 04, 2024 12:56 pm
#104680
For this question, I narrowed down my options to (A) and (C). Roughly, I eliminated (B), (D), and (E) for the following reasons:
(B) - The answer choice is about "the most successful artists working today." However, we don't know what Taruskin and sociohistorical critics think about artists today; it's possible in the modern age things have changed where "high art" no longer just reflects the values of the political and social elites.
(D) - "artists who are themselves members of the aristocratic or middle classes." The passage does not state or infer that artists were of a specific social class, so we cannot attribute this view to Taruskin.
(E) - This is the opposite of Taruskin's view; he and other sociohistorical critics believe that "high art" embodies the ideology of the elite.
Between (A) and (C), I chose (A) because I thought it was reinforcing the point made in paragraph 3. "subtle analyses of the way such art embodied the ideology of the elite" seemed to be good evidence for (A).
Is (A) incorrect because it states "the most talented artists?" I think I equated "well-known artist" from the passage with this phrase, but can see how those two might not be the same. I can see why (C) is the correct answer, but am looking for stronger evidence as to why (A) is incorrect.