In saying that domestic fiction was based on a conception of fiction as part of a "continuum" (line 30), the author m...

saskipper on June 16, 2020

Answer choice E

Can you please explain how to eliminate answer choice E? I see why B is correct, but I initially chose E because it seemed to be supported by the text when it says "bound together by a common goal of promoting domestic morality and religious belief..." Is it too much of a stretch to say that domestic fiction as a "continuum" would promote cohesiveness and continuity of society? Thanks!

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Victoria on June 26, 2020

Hi @saskipper,

It is possible to say that this continuum of domestic fiction may have promoted cohesiveness and the continuity of society; however, answer choice (E) is incorrect for two reasons.

First, there is not enough evidence in the passage to support the claim that domestic fiction promoted social cohesion.

Second, and more importantly, the author's purpose in including this statement was not to illustrate that domestic fiction promoted social cohesion and continuity. Rather, the author intended to illustrate that domestic fiction, as pictured on this continuum, was treated as largely in distinct from other works such as those devoted to piety and domestic instruction. These works as a collective were "bound together" by the "common goal" you've outlined above.

Hope this is helpful! Please let us know if you have any further questions.

frederickliu on December 29, 2022

But isn't "It was not uncommon for the same multipurpose book to be indistinguishably a novel, a
child-rearing manual, and a tract on Christian duty" a style of the previous/traditional and on-going domestic novels?

Emil-Kunkin on January 23, 2023

I think the quote you mention is supporting the idea that the domestic novel was not really distinct from other genres at the time