CAT 2021 Slot 1VARC Question 14

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Direction for Reading Comprehension: The passages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage.

The sleights of hand that conflate consumption with virtue are a central theme in A Thirst for Empire, a sweeping and richly detailed history of tea by the historian Erika Rappaport. How did tea evolve from an obscure "China drink" to a universal beverage imbued with civilising properties? The answer, in brief, revolves around this conflation, not only by profit-motivated marketers but by a wide variety of interest groups. While abundant historical records have allowed the study of how tea itself moved from east to west, Rappaport is focused on the movement of the idea of tea to suit particular purposes.

Beginning in the 1700s, the temperance movement advocated for tea as a pleasure that cheered but did not inebriate, and industrialists soon borrowed this moral argument in advancing their case for free trade in tea (and hence more open markets for their textiles). Factory owners joined in, compelled by the cause of a sober workforce, while Christian missionaries discovered that tea "would soothe any colonial encounter". During the Second World War, tea service was presented as a social and patriotic activity that uplifted soldiers and calmed refugees.

But it was tea's consumer-directed marketing by importers and retailers - and later by brands - that most closely portends current trade debates. An early version of the "farm to table" movement was sparked by anti-Chinese sentiment and concerns over trade deficits, as well as by the reality and threat of adulterated tea containing dirt and hedge clippings. Lipton was soon advertising "from the Garden to Tea Cup" supply chains originating in British India and supervised by "educated Englishmen". While tea marketing always presented direct consumer benefits (health, energy, relaxation), tea drinkers were also assured that they were participating in a larger noble project that advanced the causes of family, nation and civilization. . . .

Rappaport's treatment of her subject is refreshingly apolitical. Indeed, it is a virtue that readers will be unable to guess her political orientation: both the miracle of markets and capitalism's dark underbelly are evident in tea's complex story, as are the complicated effects of British colonialism. . . . Commodity histories are now themselves commodities: recent works investigate cotton, salt, cod, sugar, chocolate, paper and milk. And morality marketing is now a commodity as well, applied to food, "fair trade" apparel and eco-tourism. Yet tea is, Rappaport makes clear, a world apart - an astonishing success story in which tea marketers not only succeeded in conveying a sense of moral elevation to the consumer but also arguably did advance the cause of civilisation and community.

I have been offered tea at a British garden party, a Bedouin campfire, a Turkish carpet shop and a Japanese chashitsu, to name a few settings. In each case the offering was more an idea - friendship, community, respect - than a drink, and in each case the idea then created a reality. It is not a stretch to say that tea marketers have advanced the particularly noble cause of human dialogue and friendship.

This book review argues that, according to Rappaport, tea is unlike other "morality" products because it:

Answer & solution

  • A

    was actively encouraged by interest groups in the government.

  • B

    was marketed by a wide range of interest groups.

  • C

    appealed to a universal group and not just to a niche section of people.

  • had an actual beneficial effect on social interaction and society in general.

Solution

Easy

The stem asks why, per Rappaport, tea is unlike other "morality" products. Go to paragraph 4: morality marketing is now common (food, "fair trade" apparel, eco-tourism), "Yet tea is… a world apart" because tea marketers "not only succeeded in conveying a sense of moral elevation… but also arguably did advance the cause of civilisation and community." The distinguishing feature is the real social benefit, not just the marketed feeling. Pick that.

A

Wrong. Encouragement by government interest groups is not what sets tea apart; the passage's interest groups (temperance, factories, missionaries) are how tea was promoted, shared with the general phenomenon, not its uniqueness.

B

Wrong. "Marketed by a wide range of interest groups" describes how tea spread, but morality marketing generally also involves many actors. This is not the "world apart" distinction Rappaport draws.

C

Wrong. Universal vs niche appeal is not the contrast made. The passage distinguishes tea by its actual beneficial effect, not by breadth of audience.

D

Correct. Tea is "a world apart" because, beyond conveying moral elevation, it "arguably did advance the cause of civilisation and community" — an actual beneficial effect on social interaction and society. That real-world impact is what other morality products lack.

Answer: Option D — tea uniquely had a genuine beneficial effect on society, not merely a marketed sense of virtue.

CAT 2021 Slot 1 VARC Q14: This book review argues that, according to Rappaport, tea is unlike other "morality" products because it: — Solution | TheCATExam