CAT 2023 Slot 3VARC Question 13

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage, choose the best answer for each question.

In 2006, the Met [art museum in the US] agreed to return the Euphronios krater, a masterpiece Greek urn that had been a museum draw since 1972. In 2007, the Getty [art museum in the US] agreed to return 40 objects to Italy, including a marble Aphrodite, in the midst of looting scandals. And in December, Sotheby’s and a private owner agreed to return an ancient Khmer statue of a warrior, pulled from auction two years before, to Cambodia. 

Cultural property, or patrimony, laws limit the transfer of cultural property outside the source country’s territory, including outright export prohibitions and national ownership laws. Most art historians, archaeologists, museum officials and policymakers portray cultural property laws in general as invaluable tools for counteracting the ugly legacy of Western cultural imperialism. 

During the late 19th and early 20th century — an era former Met director Thomas Hoving called “the age of piracy” — American and European art museums acquired antiquities by hook or by crook, from grave robbers or souvenir collectors, bounty from digs and ancient sites in impoverished but art-rich source countries. Patrimony laws were intended to protect future archaeological discoveries against Western imperialist designs. . . .

I surveyed 90 countries with one or more archaeological sites on UNESCO’s World Heritage Site list, and my study shows that in most cases the number of discovered sites diminishes sharply after a country passes a cultural property law. There are 222 archaeological sites listed for those 90 countries. When you look into the history of the sites, you see that all but 21 were discovered before the passage of cultural property laws. . . . 

Strict cultural patrimony laws are popular in most countries. But the downside may be that they reduce incentives for foreign governments, nongovernmental organizations and educational institutions to invest in overseas exploration because their efforts will not necessarily be rewarded by opportunities to hold, display and study what is uncovered. To the extent that source countries can fund their own archaeological projects, artifacts and sites may still be discovered. . . . The survey has far-reaching implications. It suggests that source countries, particularly in the developing world, should narrow their cultural property laws so that they can reap the benefits of new archaeological discoveries, which typically increase tourism and enhance cultural pride. This does not mean these nations should abolish restrictions on foreign excavation and foreign claims to artifacts. 

China provides an interesting alternative approach for source nations eager for foreign archaeological investment. From 1935 to 2003, China had a restrictive cultural property law that prohibited foreign ownership of Chinese cultural artifacts. In those years, China’s most significant archaeological discovery occurred by chance, in 1974, when peasant farmers accidentally uncovered ranks of buried terra cotta warriors, which are part of Emperor Qin’s spectacular tomb system.

In 2003, the Chinese government switched course, dropping its cultural property law and embracing collaborative international archaeological research. Since then, China has nominated 11 archaeological sites for inclusion in the World Heritage Site list, including eight in 2013, the most ever for China.

It can be inferred from the passage that archaeological sites are considered important by some source countries because they:

Answer & solution

  • A

    are a symbol of Western imperialism.

  • B

    are subject to strict patrimony laws.

  • C

    generate funds for future discoveries.

  • give a boost to the tourism sector.

Solution

Easy

The question asks why some source countries value their archaeological sites. Look for the passage's stated benefits of new discoveries — then match an option word-for-word to that benefit.

Key line (para 5): narrowing patrimony laws lets countries "reap the benefits of new archaeological discoveries, which typically increase tourism and enhance cultural pride."

A

Symbol of Western imperialism. The passage links imperialism to how antiquities were looted, not to why source countries value the sites. Reversed idea — wrong.

B

Subject to strict patrimony laws. Patrimony laws are the cause of the debate, not the reason a site is valued. The author actually argues these laws reduce discoveries — wrong.

C

Generate funds for future discoveries. The passage says discoveries increase tourism and pride; it never says the sites themselves fund further digs. Unsupported — wrong.

D

Boost the tourism sector. Directly echoes "discoveries, which typically increase tourism." Exact textual match — correct.

Option D — the passage explicitly names increased tourism as a benefit countries can reap from their archaeological sites.

CAT 2023 Slot 3 VARC Q13: It can be inferred from the passage that archaeological sites are considered important by some source countrie — Solution | TheCATExam