American Indian Culture and History

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American Indian Culture and History

by Sharma_Gaurav » Sun Sep 06, 2009 3:41 am
Please use stop watch : -- It is good that we compare timings, I think my speed is slow and needs improvement.
Timing = 6:30 minutes to read,
Overall completion = 15 minutes.
=====================================================

It is an unfortunate fact that most North Americans know little about American Indian culture and history. Scholars have studied such matters, but they have not succeeded in broadcasting their conclusions widely. Thus, it is still not widely known that American Indians have epics, that they performed plays long before Europeans arrived, and that they practiced politics and carried on trade.
One way to gain a fuller appreciation of this rich culture is to examine American Indian poetry, for poetry is in all cultures the most central and articulate of the arts. It is especially important that we study American Indian poetry as this poetry can create a context that gives cohesive expression to the crafts, the artifacts, and the isolated facts that many Americans have managed to notice willy-nilly. Even a survey of American Indian poetry reveals a range of poetic thought and technique that defies easy generalization. Jarold Ramsey hazards a summary, however, which serves at least to give the uninitiated reader some sense of what American Indian poetry is like. Overall, he writes, it represents "an oral, formulaic, traditional, and anonymous art form," whose approach is to emphasize the "mythic and sacred" components of reality. It "flourished through public performances... by skilled recitalists whose audiences already knew the individual stories" and valued the performers for their "ability to exploit their material dramatically and to combine them ï¼»their storiesï¼½ in longer cycles" rather than for their "plot invention." Because this poetry belongs to highly ethnocentric tribal peoples, whose cultures "we still do not know much about," it "is likely to seem all the more terse, even cryptic."
American Indian poetry has another feature that Ramsey ignores: it is always functional. Whether sung, chanted, or recited; whether performed ceremonially, as entertainment, or as part of a task such as curing a patient or grinding corn; or whether recited individually or by a group, it is always fully woven into the fabric of ordinary life.
For complicated reasons, American Indian poetry has basically been ignored by non-Indian cultures. Kenneth Lincoln writes that failure to hear American Indian voices results "partly...from the tragedies of tribal dislocation, partly from mistranslation, partly from misconceptions about literature, partly from cultural indifference." Brian Swann suggests an additional explanation: tribal poetry is oral, whereas Europeans arrived in the New World with a deeply ingrained belief in the primacy of the written word. As a result, European settles found it hard to imagine that poetry could exist without written texts and thus that the American Indians had achieved something parallel to what Europeans called literature long before Europeans arrived. As a consequence, Europeans did not fully respond to the rich vitality of American Indian poetry.
1. According to the passage, American Indian cultures have produced all of the following forms of artistic expression EXCEPT
(A) crafts
(B) dramas
(C) songs
(D) written poems
(E) oral epics
2. According to Jarold Ramsey, American Indian poetry is an art form characterized by its
(A) unusual depictions of landscapes
(B) integration with everyday affairs
(C) universal accessibility
(D) highly original plots
(E) adaptability to public performance
3. According to Kenneth Lincoln, one of the reasons that non-Indians have had little knowledge of American Indian poetry is that American Indian poems
(A) have been poorly translated
(B) have not yet attracted the scholarly attention they deserve
(C) can be appreciated only when presented orally
(D) are difficult to understand without a background in comparative mythology
(E) are too stylistically complex
4. According to the passage, it would be unusual for American Indian poetry to be
(A) attributed to specific authors
(B) sung by a group of performers
(C) chanted while working
(D) sung during a sacred ceremony
(E) performed in a dramatic manner
5. It can be inferred from the passage that Brian Swann believes which of the following about the European settlers of America?
(A) They probably were more literate, on the average, than the general European population they left behind.
(B) They probably thought it necessary to understand American Indian politics before studying American Indian literature.
(C) They probably did not recognize evidence of an oral poetic tradition in the American Indian cultures they encountered.
(D) They probably could not appreciate American Indian poetry because it was composed in long narrative cycles.
(E) They probably did not study American Indian poetry because its subject matter was too practically oriented.
6. The tone of lines 12-16 suggests that the author believes that most Americans' knowledge of American Indian culture can best be characterized as
(A) spotty and contradictory
(B) stereotyped and limited
(C) confused and inaccurate
(D) unsystematic and superficial
(E) vague and biased

7. Which of the following best describes the organization of the last paragraph of the passage?
(A) An observation is made and qualifications of it are provided.
(B) A phenomenon is noted and explanations for it are presented.
(C) A hypothesis is presented and arguments against it are cited.
(D) A prognosis is made and evidence supporting it is discussed.
(E) A criticism is presented and information expanding it is provided.
Source: — Reading Comprehension |

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Re :

by Sharma_Gaurav » Sun Sep 06, 2009 3:42 am
Frorgot to mention that accuracy wise I got only one incorrect.
Will post answers once you guys respond.

Source - 3000 RC

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Re: Re :

by heshamelaziry » Mon Sep 14, 2009 7:10 pm
Sharma_Gaurav wrote:Frorgot to mention that accuracy wise I got only one incorrect.
Will post answers once you guys respond.

Source - 3000 RC
First, 15 minutes to answer 7 questions is not bad. YOu only need to improve by 1.5 minutes.

Second, could you please tell me where I can find 3000 RC questions ? This would be very helpful, as I need to practice a lot to improve timing.

Thanks.

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by heshamelaziry » Mon Sep 14, 2009 7:45 pm
My answers are:



[spoiler]D
[spoiler]B
[spoiler]A
[spoiler]A
[spoiler]C
[spoiler]C
[spoiler]B


I finished in 12 minutes. Hope I got at least 5 correct.

Please don't forget to post OA.[spoiler][/spoiler]

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by pandeyvineet24 » Tue Sep 15, 2009 7:20 pm
My Answers are

(1) D
(2) B
(3) A
(4) A
(5) C
(6) B
(7) B

I took around 13 minutes to complete the passage.

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My answers to the RC

by vivekjaiswal » Tue Sep 15, 2009 7:42 pm
Hi,

I dont know if I hurried a lot in doing this; my timing was 2min 56sec to read the passage and 6min 31sec to complete the 7 questions. (I have this habit of lapping my stop watch while I solve the questions - gives me an extra push to be quick)
Hope I have a fair enough accuracy:
1. D
2. B
3. A
4. A
5. C
6. E (it was difficult to identify the line numbers mentioned :( )
7. B

Cheers,
Vivek

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Re: My answers to the RC

by heshamelaziry » Tue Sep 15, 2009 8:32 pm
vivekjaiswal wrote:Hi,

I dont know if I hurried a lot in doing this; my timing was 2min 56sec to read the passage and 6min 31sec to complete the 7 questions. (I have this habit of lapping my stop watch while I solve the questions - gives me an extra push to be quick)
Hope I have a fair enough accuracy:
1. D
2. B
3. A
4. A
5. C
6. E (it was difficult to identify the line numbers mentioned :( )
7. B

Cheers,
Vivek
I am practicing to read the passage fairly quikly, but not too quick. My weakness is that I tend to be stubborn to understand the details and that is a killer and useless, especially with scientific passages. So, I am taming myself. I try to make a table of contents for the passage by making title for each paragraph while trying to get a sense of why the author is writing this; what is his point, what idea is he trying to illustrate and how.
Afterwards, i read the queston and go fish for the details. But, even then sometimes it is still hard to be sure of the right answer. So, I try to strongly stay away from extreme worded answers, answers that are out of scope.

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Answers

by Sharma_Gaurav » Wed Sep 16, 2009 5:50 am
Time for the OA guys -

1 - D
2-E
3-A
4- A
5-C
6 - D
7-B

Some guys did really quickly. I am worried and need to increase my speed a bit.
This is from 3000 RC document.
You can download it from this site itself I think from GMAT material section.
Let me know if you stil cannot find it.

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by Sharma_Gaurav » Wed Sep 16, 2009 5:56 am
VivekJaiswal ,

can you share your ideas regarding speeding without loosing accuracy?

I am going by manhattan gmat strategy of making notes during reading and seketon skectch of whole passage.
This take upto 4 to 5 mins to complete passage- Hence I am lagging behind.

Your help is appreciated.

Thanks

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unhappy with my low accuracy though...

by vivekjaiswal » Wed Sep 16, 2009 7:26 am
Hi Gaurav,

MGMAT's strategy is quite great to work on your accuracy...and I must say that you should practice as much as possible sticking to one strategy
I had followed the same strategy for around 50-60 odd passages and realised that you dont need to do the take-notes-and-answer thing in all the passages, use it only when the passage's first para just refuses to fit into your head and certainly if its the very first RC of the test.
and with practice you can fit a lot of info in your mind without taking notes...as in you may be able to take the notes virtually in your mind as you have always practiced. what you will learn from practice is that which points you generally take down as your notes...so when you read a para, just give yourself a couple of seconds to rephrase the para in short points in your head...dont practice it explicitly it will come automatically when you have practiced taking notes for some passages.
another thing that i do is that i dont read items in a list, any names or dates and just kind of remember which section of the passage has such stuff, and come back to the section when something related to that is asked. this saves a lot of time in reading: just as i could in the passage you posted which had many names and information related to them in the last para, and i hardly read anything in that para, with every question i came back to the passage and looked for the info being asked for.
you can improve on accuracy only by practice and i realise some people have a fav subject inclination as well...for me science and technology comes easy but labor movements or women liberalisation or politics is a difficult topic so i try to take notes for RCs on these subjects

hope this helps,
vivek

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Re: My answers to the RC

by vivekjaiswal » Wed Sep 16, 2009 7:33 am
heshamelaziry wrote:
vivekjaiswal wrote:Hi,

I dont know if I hurried a lot in doing this; my timing was 2min 56sec to read the passage and 6min 31sec to complete the 7 questions. (I have this habit of lapping my stop watch while I solve the questions - gives me an extra push to be quick)
Hope I have a fair enough accuracy:
1. D
2. B
3. A
4. A
5. C
6. E (it was difficult to identify the line numbers mentioned :( )
7. B

Cheers,
Vivek
I am practicing to read the passage fairly quikly, but not too quick. My weakness is that I tend to be stubborn to understand the details and that is a killer and useless, especially with scientific passages. So, I am taming myself. I try to make a table of contents for the passage by making title for each paragraph while trying to get a sense of why the author is writing this; what is his point, what idea is he trying to illustrate and how.
Afterwards, i read the queston and go fish for the details. But, even then sometimes it is still hard to be sure of the right answer. So, I try to strongly stay away from extreme worded answers, answers that are out of scope.
heshamelaziry,

that's a good strategy i think...because i am in a hurry to read the passage i sometimes lose the accuracy (like i did in this one :( )
i am also kind of taming myself on this

thanks
vivek

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by singhag » Fri Sep 18, 2009 5:14 am
Hi,

I got last 7th question wrong...can somebody please explain how B is the answer.

Thanks
Gaurav