- Sat May 20, 2017 10:59 am
#35175
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14202)
The correct answer choice is (B)
This question asks for the author’s main point. As discussed above, the main point of the passage is
to discuss the U.S. Latina authors who changed the traditional autobiography genre as they expressed
their life stories in the 1980s.
Answer choice (A): The passage does not mention whether the Latina authors discussed had
formerly written mostly poetry and fiction. Further, the author of the passage points out that the
genre as they found it was not perfectly suited to their needs--that is why they changed the very
boundaries of the genre. Since this choice cannot be confirmed by the information presented and
cannot be the passage’s main point.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. As prephrased above, the main point of
the passage is to discuss the Latina authors who, in the late 1980’s, changed the boundaries of the
autobiography (setting aside standard conventions), so that the genre would better suit the expression
of their own histories.
Answer choice (C): The author does discuss the diversity of styles found among three
nontraditional Latina autobiographies that were published in the 1980s, but recent traditional Latina
autobiographies are not discussed. This is not the main point of the passage and should thus be ruled
out of contention.
Answer choice (D): The main point of the passage is not that the Latina writers have experimented
with autobiographies to show that narratives can be combined with other genres in a single work;
rather, the point is that three writers in the 1980s were revolutionaries who redefined the genre of the
autobiography.
Answer choice (E): This choice refers to the third paragraph of the passage, where the author
mentions one critic who specializes in the genre of the autobiography, and points to Moraga’s
non-chronological presentation as an important point of distinction between men’s and women’s
traditional autobiographies. This is not, however, the main point of the passage, so it cannot be the
right answer to this Main Point question.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14202)
The correct answer choice is (B)
This question asks for the author’s main point. As discussed above, the main point of the passage is
to discuss the U.S. Latina authors who changed the traditional autobiography genre as they expressed
their life stories in the 1980s.
Answer choice (A): The passage does not mention whether the Latina authors discussed had
formerly written mostly poetry and fiction. Further, the author of the passage points out that the
genre as they found it was not perfectly suited to their needs--that is why they changed the very
boundaries of the genre. Since this choice cannot be confirmed by the information presented and
cannot be the passage’s main point.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. As prephrased above, the main point of
the passage is to discuss the Latina authors who, in the late 1980’s, changed the boundaries of the
autobiography (setting aside standard conventions), so that the genre would better suit the expression
of their own histories.
Answer choice (C): The author does discuss the diversity of styles found among three
nontraditional Latina autobiographies that were published in the 1980s, but recent traditional Latina
autobiographies are not discussed. This is not the main point of the passage and should thus be ruled
out of contention.
Answer choice (D): The main point of the passage is not that the Latina writers have experimented
with autobiographies to show that narratives can be combined with other genres in a single work;
rather, the point is that three writers in the 1980s were revolutionaries who redefined the genre of the
autobiography.
Answer choice (E): This choice refers to the third paragraph of the passage, where the author
mentions one critic who specializes in the genre of the autobiography, and points to Moraga’s
non-chronological presentation as an important point of distinction between men’s and women’s
traditional autobiographies. This is not, however, the main point of the passage, so it cannot be the
right answer to this Main Point question.