|Question 6Verbal

Source Texts

Text
Text 1
Scholarship today overrepresents experimentally fragmented narrative structures, such as that of Flann O'Brien's At Swim-Two-Birds, beyond the degree to which they actually influenced fiction in Britain and Ireland during the modernist period (roughly 1900-1945). Meanwhile, John Galsworthy's The Forsyte Saga, whose coherent, linear narrative structure recalls the fiction of previous centuries, attracts woefully little attention from scholars of modernism.

Text 2
Distant reading, or computer-assisted quantitative analysis of massive collections of digitized texts, can reveal stylistic elements that have heretofore escaped notice, despite being shared by numerous texts from the modernist period. For too long, scholars have focused on narrative fragmentation versus coherence, inhibiting inquiry into other points of stylistic correspondence among works that would enrich our understanding of the modernist canon.
Based on the texts, both the author of Text 1 and the author of Text 2 would most likely agree with which statement about scholarship on works from the modernist period in Britain and Ireland?
Without a major shift in focus, the vision that it presents of fiction written in the period will continue to be unnecessarily limited.
A
It must widen its focus to include aspects of modernist fiction beyond style, a productive but overrepresented site of inquiry.
B
Its primary methods for analyzing fiction written in the period are growing obsolete as computer technology advances.
C
Instead of engaging in unproductive debates, it should work to rehabilitate the reputations of neglected modernist works.
D