Direction: The passage below is accompanied by a set of questions. Choose the best answer to each question.
Sound the alarm! The kingdom of letters has admitted Trojan horses: James Frey, JT Leroy, Misha Defonseca, Margaret B. Jones, Herman Rosenblat, and now Matt McCarthy, portions of whose baseball memoir, the New York Times reports, are “incorrect, embellished or impossible.” The watchmen have let down their guards.
I write: Hold your horses. In the rush to diagnose these fake memoirs as symptoms of a diseased culture, we have failed to consider an equally plausible alternative. What if the exposure of fake memoirists is not due to an increased frequency of lying, but rather to our increased ability to root out liars and hold them accountable for their verisimilitudes? Perhaps the outings of these hoaxes mark not a blurring of the line between fact and fiction, but a further demarcation.
Indeed, it may be helpful to remember that the novel was born from exactly such confusion. One of the standards by which the earliest novels were judged was their ability to convince readers that their narratives were, in fact, real. Authors deployed several tricks to scaffold the illusion. 'Robinson Crusoe' was “written by himself,” according to the novel’s title page, which omitted Daniel Defoe’s name. Samuel Richardson’s novel 'Pamela', an attempt to instruct in good conduct through entertainment, was written as a series of letters penned by the heroine. In his preface to the novel, which excluded his name altogether, Richardson included several real letters from friends to whom he had shown the manuscript, but he changed the salutation from “Dear Author” to “Dear Editor” and even, writing under the guise of “editor,” praised “Pamela’s” letters. However, this was a lie, but not a hoax. Richardson wanted his novels to be read with "Historical Faith", since they contained, he believed, "the truth of the possible- the truth of human nature". Richardson’s authorship was revealed shortly after Pamela’s publication, but rather than serving time on Oprah’s couch, he was hailed as an innovator of the novelistic form.
Whereas novels were unashamedly fake memoirs at their conception, our recent hoaxes suggest that the line between the genres, once drawn, cannot easily be erased. This is in no small part due to the Internet’s surveillance. All along, historians had raised questions about Misha Defonseca, who claimed to have survived the Holocaust by living with a pack of wolves, but the engine of her downfall was her former publisher Jane Daniel’s blog. James Frey’s sine qua non of the fudged-memoir genre, A Million Little Pieces, was debunked by the website The Smoking Gun, which posted his actual arrest records and compared them to Frey’s embellished retellings. Deborah Lipstadt used her blog to gather evidence against Herman Rosenblat’s memoir.
If anything, you could argue that the fact-checkers are doing too good a job. There seems to be some risk that, in attempting to hold memoirs to journalistic standards of factuality, the watchdogs miss the forest for the trees, fixating on minor details in books whose general pictures are correct. The New York Times includes in its dossier against Matt McCarthy disputations by teammates who McCarthy alleges threatened children and made fun of Hispanics, as though their denials of having said such self-incriminating things were more trustworthy than McCarthy’s accusations. When Jose Canseco published his baseball memoirs Juiced and Vindicated, reviewers caviled over minor details and unsubstantiated claims, including that Alex Rodriguez had used steroids. Recent events have proven the gist of Canseco’s memoirs largely correct.
Indeed, it seems unlikely that, say, every claim in Casanova’s The Story of My Life would hold up to such scrutiny. And yet, if we knew this were the case, would we excise it from the canon? Writers’ enormous talents can sometimes render moot questions of their works’ factuality; our fraudsters, meanwhile, attempted to compensate for their meager talents by actually inhabiting their bloated fictions. They suffer not an excess of imagination, which can illuminate even the most mundane experiences, but a retreat from it. And yet simply because they lost their handles on the truth does not mean that the culture also has. Maybe the symptom of our age is not the fake memoirists themselves, but the catching of fake memoirists. In which case: Sound the church bells! The traitors are routed! The watchmen won!
Q1: Which of the following is a suitable title for the passage?
(a) How to write a memoir
(b) The age of literary fraud
(c) Who is afraid of fake memoirists
(d) Writing in the age of the internet
Ans: (c)
Sol:
The passage discusses the recent exposure of fake memoirs and questions the notion that we are in an era of increased literary fraud. It argues that the increased detection of fake memoirs is due to enhanced scrutiny rather than a rise in fraudulent activity. The passage also reflects on the origins of the novel as a genre that employed similar deceptions and suggests that the real issue is not the presence of fake memoirists but the effectiveness of their detection.
Option (a), "How to write a memoir," is incorrect because the passage does not provide instructions on writing a memoir. It rather critiques the nature of memoirs and their authenticity.
Option (b), "The age of literary fraud," is also incorrect. While the passage touches on literary fraud, it does not support the idea that we are living in an age characterized by it. Instead, it argues that the exposure of fake memoirs indicates improved detection rather than an increase in fraud.
Option (c), "Who is afraid of fake memoirists," is the most suitable title as it aligns with the passage’s argument. The author challenges the fear surrounding fake memoirists and suggests that the real development is in the ability to identify them.
Option (d), "Writing in the age of the internet," is not as precise because the passage is specifically focused on fake memoirs and their detection rather than on writing broadly.
Thus, Option (c) accurately captures the essence of the passage, making it the best choice.
Q2: Which of the following is the author unlikely to agree with?
(a) There isn’t more literary fraud in our age. More fraud is coming to light due to the Internet’s surveillance.
(b) The line dividing novels and fake memoirs was never clear.
(c) As long as the main or essential part of a memoir is correct, it does not matter if lesser details do not stand up to verification.
(d) There exists now a widespread, diseased culture of literary fraud.
Ans: (d)
Sol:
a. We aren't seeing more literary fraud today; it's just that the internet helps us find more of it.
True. The passage says this.
b. The difference between novels and fake memoirs was never clear.
True. The author suggests that novels have always used similar tricks.
c. If the main part of a memoir is true, it's okay if some details aren't verified.
True. The author thinks memoirs shouldn't be judged as strictly as journalistic reports.
d. There is now a widespread problem with literary fraud in our culture.
False. The passage argues that more fraud is being discovered, not that there is more fraud overall.
The question is: Choose the correct option.
So, the answer is D.
Q3: With regard to the novel ‘Pamela’, the author states that Richardson’s artifice “ was a lie, but not a hoax”. What does he mean?
(a) It was an unintentional deception that contained the truth of human nature and was hence acceptable to readers.
(b) It was just a ploy to capture the imagination of the readers with the truth of the possible.
(c) It was a deception perpetrated simply to make money.
(d) It was a mere prank, and did not generate public interest.
Ans: (b)
Sol:
a. It was an unintentional deception, but because it revealed human nature, it was acceptable.
Not Correct. Richardson’s deception in Pamela was intentional, so this statement is incorrect.
b. It was a tactic to capture readers' imagination with the truth of human nature.
Correct. The author says that Richardson’s deception was a strategy to engage readers and that it was merely a lie, not a hoax.
c. It was a deception just to make money.
Not Correct. The author argues that Richardson’s deception wasn’t intended as a hoax for financial gain, so this option is ruled out.
d. It was just a prank and didn’t attract public interest.
Not Correct. Richardson’s authorship was quickly revealed, and he was praised as an innovator. This option doesn’t fit the author’s explanation.
The question is: Choose the correct option.
So, the answer is B.
Q4: The word ‘verisimilitude’ in the passage is farthest in meaning to
(a) absurdity
(b) plausibility
(c) authenticity
(d) credibleness
Ans: (a)
Sol:
Verisimilitude means "the appearance of truth." It describes something that seems true but may not actually be true. In the passage, when the author talks about holding people accountable for their verisimilitudes, it means checking how true their claims appear to be.
Of the given choices, the word 'absurdity' is the most different from verisimilitude in meaning.
So, the answer is 'absurdity.'
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