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TOEFLReading

Read an Academic Passage

Read the passage and answer the questions.

0 / 5 answered
art history or cultural studies

Murals and Memory: How Public Art Shapes Urban Identity

309 words

[1]In many cities, murals are more than decoration: they function as public statements about who belongs and what a community values. Art historians increasingly argue that murals help construct urban identity by turning ordinary streets into shared cultural spaces. Because they are visible to everyone, murals can communicate history and social ideals more broadly than artworks confined to museums.

[2]One reason murals influence identity is their connection to local narratives. In the early twentieth century, Mexican muralists such as Diego Rivera painted large-scale scenes of workers and indigenous peoples to emphasize national history and collective labor. Although these murals were created in a specific political context, similar strategies appear elsewhere. In some U.S. neighborhoods, for example, murals commemorate migration stories or civil rights leaders, offering residents a visual reminder of struggles that may not be fully represented in official monuments. The placement of these works—on schools, markets, or apartment buildings—also matters, since daily exposure can make the images feel like part of everyday life rather than a distant historical lesson.

[3]At the same time, murals can become controversial when different groups disagree about what should be celebrated. City governments sometimes sponsor murals to encourage tourism and urban renewal, but this support may dilute the original message. A mural that begins as a critique of inequality can be reinterpreted as a harmless attraction once it appears on travel websites. This shift illustrates how public art is vulnerable to appropriation: its meaning can be reshaped by advertisers, politicians, or even well-intentioned visitors who view the work mainly as a backdrop for photographs.

[4]Overall, murals reveal that public art is not neutral. By selecting certain stories and symbols, murals can strengthen community pride, preserve local memory, and invite dialogue among residents. Yet their impact depends on who controls the images and how audiences interpret them. For these reasons, murals are best understood as active participants in cultural life rather than passive urban ornament.

1
main idea0

What is the main idea of the passage?

2
detailParagraph 2

According to the passage, why does the placement of murals on buildings like schools or markets matter?

3
vocabularyParagraph 3

The word "dilute" in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to:

4
inferenceParagraph 3

What can be inferred from paragraph 3 about murals that appear on travel websites?

5
purposeParagraph 4

Why does the author describe murals as "active participants in cultural life" rather than "passive urban ornament" in paragraph 4?

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