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How does Thoreau feel about commerce? He writes, "We don't ride upon the railroad; it rides upon us." He wants and end to the war fighting for the...
Thoreau was all about simplicity; anything that took away from his vision was the enemy. Mechanical aids were one of them. Guess he had to train a...
SAT Reading 2.3 Passage Comparison 171 Views
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Description:
SAT Reading: Passage Comparison Drill 2, Problem 3
- Foreign Language / Korean Subtitled
- Foreign Language / Arabic Subtitled
- Foreign Language / Spanish Subtitled
- Foreign Language / Chinese Subtitled
- Rhetoric / Analyzing word choice
- Product Type / SAT Math
- Literary / Figurative Language in Historical/Cultural Setting
- Literary Nonfiction / Syntax, Diction, Voice, Tone, Imagery
- Literary / Symbolism, Allegory, Allusions
- Reading closely / Using analogical reasoning
Transcript
- 00:03
A Shmoop a day keeps the doctor away...
- 00:16
The phrase "climb upon the rattling wagon of wishful illusions" functions as...what?
- 00:29
This phrase comes directly from one of Hurston's quotes, so we can take a look at what she's saying.
- 00:34
First things first: she didn't climb aboard the rattling wagon of wishful illusions.
- 00:39
If she did, something like this would happen...
Full Transcript
- 00:42
It's a wagon full of illusions, right? This tips us off that it's not real and probably not good.
- 00:48
There's not a chance that (D) is the right answer.
- 00:50
We just figured out that this wagon isn't real, so there's no way this is a reference
- 00:54
to a wagon she rode when she was a child. The context around the quote lets us know
- 00:59
that the "wishful illusions" to which Zora is referring are the ideas of other writers.
- 01:05
She thinks that a lot of her critics get on her case because she writes things the way
- 01:08
they are, not the way she'd like them to be.
- 01:11
Knowing this, we can leave (A) by the wayside. A person with that much gumption is probably
- 01:16
not the sort who'd be unwilling to do the work to further her craft.
- 01:22
There's no talk in the passage about Hurston avoiding metaphors, making (E) easy to leave
- 01:26
in the dust as well.
- 01:30
We're pretty sure the real Hurston could come up with a better one.
- 01:33
Choice (C) is kind of heading down the right path. Zora does express the idea that other
- 01:37
writers are representing things in a way that she feels is untrue.
- 01:44
But the topics the other writers are writing about aren't necessarily "unrelated,"
- 01:49
or not connected, with the topics Zora writes about. She just disagrees about the ways those
- 01:53
topics are represented. It seems our journey is at an end. (B) is
- 01:57
the only answer left, and it totally makes sense.
- 02:00
"Figurative" refers to language that uses lots of "figures of speech" like metaphors
- 02:05
and all that good stuff. This covers our requirement that the "wagon of wishful illusions"
- 02:09
not be real, making (B) the correct answer.
- 02:12
It's too bad; we like a "wishful illusion" every now and then.
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