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Anthropology Intermediate Reading Passages

You can handle basic anthropology passages. Now the field’s real argument structures appear β€” competing claims, contested evidence, theoretical disputes. Here’s how to read at this level.

5 min read Subjects Series Beginner Β· TOFU
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Intermediate anthropology reading passages move beyond single-claim descriptions of cultural practices. They present competing theoretical positions, use multiple cultural examples as contested evidence, and often argue about methodology as well as findings. The reading skill that matters at this level is not just following a claim but tracking how the author handles objections and competing views β€” which is precisely what the hardest RC question types test.

1 Why anthropology intermediate passages appear in competitive exams

At beginner level, anthropology passages describe β€” here is a cultural practice, here is what it means, here is how it fits into social life. At intermediate level, passages argue β€” here is a contested claim about human society, here are the competing interpretations, here is why one is more defensible. This argumentative complexity is precisely why intermediate anthropology reading comprehension passages appear so frequently in CAT, GMAT, and GRE sections: they require genuine argument-tracking, not just information retrieval.

The jump from beginner to intermediate in this genre is less about vocabulary and more about structure. Intermediate passages routinely present a position, acknowledge a counter-position, qualify the original claim, and conclude with a nuanced synthesis β€” all within 400–500 words. Readers who haven’t encountered this structure before find these passages confusing not because they miss individual sentences but because they lose the thread of how the argument is developing. Understanding how argument structure works in academic writing is what separates 70th percentile RC performance from 90th percentile.

πŸ’‘ What intermediate anthropology passages test that beginner ones don’t

Beginner passages generate mostly detail and vocabulary questions. Intermediate passages generate the full range: main idea, inference, author’s purpose, function of a paragraph, tone, strengthening or weakening the argument. This is not coincidental β€” the argument complexity of intermediate anthropology passages is what makes all five question types answerable from the same text. Practising at this level builds the complete RC skill set, not just retrieval accuracy.

2 Key vocabulary and concepts at the intermediate level

Intermediate anthropology passages assume the core vocabulary and introduce theoretical concepts that appear in debates about methodology, validity, and interpretation. These are the terms that shift from background to foreground at this reading level.

πŸ“Œ Concepts that become load-bearing at intermediate level

Social constructionism β€” the view that social categories (gender, race, childhood) are culturally constructed rather than naturally fixed. Passages invoking this are often arguing against biological determinism. Structural functionalism β€” the view that cultural practices exist because they serve social functions. Often presented as a position other anthropologists critique. Agency versus structure β€” the tension between individual choice and social constraint. Intermediate passages frequently locate their argument somewhere on this spectrum. Reflexivity β€” the practice of acknowledging the observer’s own cultural position and its effects on what they see. Appears in methodological passages critiquing older anthropology. Power and hegemony β€” how dominant groups maintain cultural influence. Used in passages about colonialism, globalisation, and cultural change. Thick description β€” Clifford Geertz’s method of explaining cultural behaviour with full context rather than surface observation. Relativism versus universalism redux β€” at intermediate level, this debate becomes more nuanced: not “should we judge other cultures?” but “can any cross-cultural claim be made without cultural bias?”

3 Suggested reading order β€” beginner to intermediate progression

The transition from beginner to intermediate anthropology reading requires deliberately seeking passages that present two or more positions on the same question, rather than passages that make a single unchallenged claim.

A productive progression: start by reading passages that describe a specific cultural phenomenon clearly and make one explicit claim (beginner anchor). Then find passages on the same topic that introduce a competing interpretation β€” for example, two accounts of what a particular ritual means, where the authors disagree. Then tackle passages that engage methodological questions β€” how should anthropologists conduct and report fieldwork, and what counts as valid evidence? Finally, read passages from the nature-nurture and universalism-relativism debates where the author’s position requires you to track both what they argue and why they argue it, not just what the conclusion is. Recognising compare-contrast text structure is one of the most useful skills for this level, since intermediate anthropology passages frequently use it to set up their main argument.

Research

Academic and argumentative texts assume background knowledge that specialist readers take for granted β€” readers without that background spend cognitive resources filling knowledge gaps rather than tracking the argument. Building genre-specific background through progressive reading reduces this cognitive load significantly.

β€” Knowledge gap in reading comprehension; Readlite Research Bank, drawing on Fang, 2006 and cognitive load research

4 Active reading method for intermediate anthropology passages

The annotation system for intermediate passages needs to capture more than just the claim β€” it needs to map the argumentative structure, including counter-positions and the author’s responses to them.

1
Mark every position shift β€” not just the main claim

In intermediate passages, the author typically presents a position, then a counter-position, then qualifies or defends the original. Mark each shift with a bracket and a label: P1 (first position), CP (counter-position), Q (qualification), C (conclusion). After reading, you should be able to reconstruct the argument’s architecture from your margin notes alone. This structural map is what allows you to answer “the function of paragraph 3 is primarily to…” questions without re-reading.

2
Identify which position the author ultimately endorses β€” and how strongly

Intermediate anthropology authors often present competing views with apparent neutrality before revealing their own position through hedging language, word choice, or a final paragraph that pulls slightly in one direction. Decoding tone under apparent neutrality is the skill that answers tone and attitude questions on these passages. Mark the sentence where the author’s own voice becomes clearest β€” it’s usually the one that uses slightly stronger verbs or drops the hedging language used elsewhere.

3
For each cultural example, note both what it illustrates and what it fails to resolve

Intermediate passages use cultural examples as evidence for contested claims β€” meaning the author is aware that the example doesn’t conclusively prove anything. The examples are chosen to support a position, not to prove it. Noting what each example supports, and what objection it leaves open, directly prepares you for “which of the following would most weaken the argument?” questions, which consistently appear at this difficulty level.

5 Practice prompts and comprehension questions for intermediate level

These prompts are calibrated to the question types that intermediate anthropology passages generate most often in exam RC sections. Apply them after every passage at this level.

First: map the argument structure β€” list P1, CP, and C in three sentences. Second: identify the sentence where the author’s own position becomes clearest, and note what language signals it. Third: for the primary cultural example used, state both what it supports and what counter-example would most complicate it. Fourth: identify the passage’s position on the agency-structure spectrum β€” does the author see human behaviour as primarily shaped by social forces or individual choices? Fifth: write one question of the type “the author would most likely agree that…” and answer it using only the passage text. Distinguishing main idea questions from inference questions is particularly important at intermediate level β€” both appear with high frequency on anthropology passages, and many readers confuse them.

Intermediate anthropology passages are where RC skill really develops. The question types are harder, the arguments are denser, and the payoff β€” in exam scores and in genuine comprehension ability β€” is significantly higher than at beginner level.

Questions readers ask

You’re ready for intermediate anthropology passages when you can read a beginner-level passage, identify the central claim, and state it accurately in one sentence without re-reading. If you can do this consistently with factual passages on cultural practices β€” but still lose the thread in passages that present two competing positions β€” you’re at exactly the right entry point for intermediate work. The jump isn’t vocabulary; it’s tracking argumentative structure across a position-counter-position sequence. Start with intermediate passages that explicitly signal their structure with transition phrases like “however” and “this view misses” and work toward passages where the structural shifts are less explicitly marked.

Intermediate anthropology passages generate the full range of RC question types β€” main idea, inference, purpose of a paragraph, tone, and argument-strengthening or weakening β€” in a single text. This makes them particularly efficient practice material: one intermediate anthropology passage, read carefully with the P1/CP/C mapping method, is more comprehensive RC practice than three beginner passages. In exams like CAT and GMAT, passages at this difficulty level account for the questions that most sharply differentiate scores in the 70th–95th percentile range. Regular reading at this level builds both genre familiarity and the argument-tracking speed that timed conditions demand.

Two intermediate passages per week, done carefully with full annotation and practice prompts, is more effective than five passages done without annotation. At this level, processing quality matters more than volume β€” a student who maps the argument structure of two passages per week and reviews every inference error will improve faster than one who reads five passages passively. After six to eight weeks of careful intermediate practice, the argument patterns become predictable enough that you can track them at pace, which is when reading volume becomes a useful supplement to careful practice.

At intermediate level, the vocabulary challenge shifts from not knowing a word to not understanding what theoretical work it’s doing in the argument. “Social constructionism” isn’t hard to define β€” but understanding why an author invokes it to oppose a previous claim, and what implications that move has for the argument, requires a different kind of vocabulary knowledge. Log new intermediate-level terms with three pieces of information: the definition, the theoretical debate it belongs to, and a sentence showing how the author used it to advance their position. This functional notation produces faster improvement than definition-only notes.

CAT RC passages β€” particularly those drawn from social science and cultural studies β€” regularly operate at intermediate difficulty: they present contested claims with multiple positions and require argument-tracking rather than retrieval. GMAT Critical Reasoning and RC passages from social science sources also sit at this level. GRE Verbal includes reading passages from anthropology and sociology at intermediate to advanced difficulty. UPSC General Studies papers include social science passages that require the same position-tracking skills. At all of these exams, intermediate anthropology practice is not subject-specific preparation β€” it’s genre preparation for the argument-tracking demands that appear across all social science and humanities passages.

Read at intermediate level today

Readlite has graded anthropology and social science reads β€” including intermediate passages with comprehension questions that cover the full range of RC question types. Apply the P1/CP/C method immediately.

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