Comprehension

Once a society accepts a secular mode of creativity, within which the creator replaces God, imaginative transactions assume a self-conscious form. The tribal imagination, on the other hand, is still to a large extent dreamlike and hallucinatory. It admits fusion between various planes of existence and levels of time in a natural and artless manner. In tribal stories, oceans fly in the sky as birds, mountains swim in water as fish, animals speak as humans and stars grow like plants. Spatial order and temporal sequence do not restrict the narrative. This is not to say that tribal creations have no conventions or rules, but simply that they admit the principle of association between emotion and the narrative motif. Thus stars, seas, mountains, trees, men and animals can be angry, sad or happy. 
It might be said that tribal artists work more on the basis of their racial and sensory memory than on the basis of a cultivated imagination. In order to understand this distinction, we must understand the difference between imagination and memory. In the animate world, consciousness meets two immediate material realities: space and time. We put meaning into space by perceiving it in terms of images. The image-making faculty is a genetic gift to the human mind—this power of imagination helps us understand the space that envelops us. With regard to time, we make connections with the help of memory; one remembers being the same person today as one was yesterday.
The tribal mind has a more acute sense of time than the sense of space. Somewhere along the history of human civilization, tribal communities seem to have realized that domination over territorial space was not their lot. Thus, they seem to have turned almost obsessively to gaining domination over time. This urge is substantiated in their ritual of conversing with their dead ancestors: year after year, tribals in many parts of India worship terracotta or carved-wood objects representing their ancestors, aspiring to enter a trance in which they can converse with the dead. Over the centuries, an amazingly sharp memory has helped tribals classify material and natural objects into a highly complex system of knowledge. . .
One of the main characteristics of the tribal arts is their distinct manner of constructing space and imagery, which might be described as ‘hallucinary’. In both oral and visual forms of representation, tribal artists seem to interpret verbal or pictorial art as demarcated by an extremely flexible ‘frame’. The boundaries between art and non-art become almost invisible. Atribal epic can begin its narration from a trivial everyday event; tribal paintings merge with living space as if the two were one and the same. And within the narrative itself, or within the painted imagery, there is no deliberate attempt to follow a sequence. The episodes retold and the images created take on the apparently chaotic shapes of dreams. In a way, the syntax of language and the grammar of painting are the same, as if literature were painted words and painting were a song of images.

Question: 1

Non-human living forms exhibit human emotions in tribal narratives because tribal narratives:

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Look for key terms in the passage like "fluidity" to identify the right answer.
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • accommodate existential fluidity.
  • abandon all rules and regulations.
  • have a self-conscious form.
  • are rudimentary and underdeveloped.
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Different angle (trap-pairing): Three of the four options are deliberate distortions of specific lines in the passage. Spot which line each option twists, and the one faithful option is left standing.

Step 1 (pair each wrong option to the line it misreads):

Option 2 ("abandon all rules") twists "This is not to say that tribal creations have no conventions or rules" $-$ the passage says the opposite, that rules DO exist.

Option 3 ("self-conscious form") borrows "imaginative transactions assume a self-conscious form," but that line describes the SECULAR mode the author sets against tribal narrative. Wrong camp.

Option 4 ("rudimentary and underdeveloped") contradicts "a highly complex system of knowledge."

Step 2 (the faithful option): Option 1 "accommodate existential fluidity" restates "fusion between various planes of existence and levels of time," which is exactly why a mountain or a star can feel angry or sad.

Step 3: Since only option 1 reflects the passage rather than distorting a line, it is the cause being asked for.

Answer: Option 1.
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Question: 2

On the basis of the passage, which one of the following explains the main difference between imagination and memory?

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Focus on the contrast the passage draws between space (imagination) and time (memory).
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • Imagination helps humans make sense of space while memory helps them understand time.
  • Tribal groups value memory over imagination when it comes to creating art and literature.
  • Imagination needs to be cultivated whereas memory is more intuitive because it is racial and sensory.
  • Imagination is a genetic gift to humans whereas memory is central to human consciousness.
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Approach: Treat the four options as competing "axes of difference" and ask which axis the passage actually develops at length versus which is only name-dropped. The genuine main difference is the one the author builds an argument around.

Step 1: Scan each option for the contrast word. Option 1 contrasts space against time. Option 4 contrasts "genetic gift" against "central to consciousness" \(-\) but those are not opposites, so no real axis exists there.

Step 2: Test option 1 against the passage's structure. The author returns to space and time more than once: imagination is tied to perceiving the world (space), memory to continuity and the past (time), and the tribal digression exists precisely to show a people who gave up space and chose to rule time. An idea reused to explain a whole community is the load-bearing idea.

Step 3: Eliminate by scope. Option 2 is too narrow (only tribal art). Option 3 smuggles in "racial and sensory," a detail not framed as the core distinction. Option 4 has no contrast at all.

Step 4: Only option 1 names a true binary that the passage sustains throughout.

Answer: Option 1 \(-\) imagination for space, memory for time.
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Question: 3

All of the following statements may be considered valid inferences from the passage EXCEPT that:

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When evaluating inferences, look for those that align with the narrative style described in the passage.
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • Tribal art excludes the depiction of the mundane reality of everyday life and objects.
  • Shamanic rituals involving conversing with the dead often feature in tribal stories.
  • Tribal narratives exhibit a chronological beginning, middle, and end.
  • Tribal stories depict the natural world in accordance with rational scientific knowledge.
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The Correct Option is D

Solution and Explanation

Approach: Build a one-word "passage flavour" tag and reject the option that tastes wrong. Here the flavour is dream-logic / irrational / fantastical. Any option carrying that flavour is inferable; the option carrying the opposite flavour is the EXCEPT.

Step 1: Underline the passage's sensory words: dreamlike, hallucinatory, fused planes, oceans flying, mountains swimming. Tag = irrational wonder.

Step 2: Score each option for fit. Excluding mundane reality fits the dream tag. Shamans talking to the dead fits the ritual-trance tag. A non-linear, dream-shaped narrative fits too.

Step 3: Option 4 carries the tag "rational scientific knowledge" \(-\) the exact antonym of dream-logic. A passage cannot both insist nature is depicted with flying oceans and also claim it is depicted scientifically. Contradiction found.

Step 4: The contradiction is the thing the question wants, since EXCEPT means "cannot be inferred."

Answer: Tribal stories depict the natural world in accordance with rational scientific knowledge.
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Question: 4

Which one of the following best explains why tribals in India worship their dead ancestors?

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Look for explanations that align directly with the passage’s theme of control over time and spiritual connection.
Updated On: Jul 1, 2026
  • Tribals seek territorial domination over the spaces that they inhabit.
  • For tribals, conversing with the dead becomes a way of seeking control over time.
  • Tribals show respect to their ancestors through terracotta and carved-wood objects.
  • Tribals possess a sophisticated knowledge system that is based on memory.
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The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

Approach: Sort the four options into "reason" versus "description" buckets first. Three options describe what tribals do or what they have; only one states why. A "why" question is answered by the reason, so the odd-bucket option wins.

Step 1: Option 3 describes a method (objects used). Option 4 describes a possession (a knowledge system). Both are facts, not motives \(-\) park them.

Step 2: Option 1 offers a motive (territorial domination), but check it against the passage: tribals are said to have abandoned the contest for space. A motive the passage explicitly denies cannot be the answer.

Step 3: Option 2 offers a motive the passage affirms \(-\) seeking control over time. With space ruled out and time ruled in, ancestor-worship becomes the bridge to the past, hence to time.

Step 4: Reason bucket, passage-supported, exactly one survivor.

Answer: Option 2 \(-\) conversing with the dead is a way of seeking control over time.
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