Answer:
The statement that BEST explains why this quotation from the selection includes jargon is The phrase eurocentric curricula would not be understood by most people.
Explanation:
The question is missing the Excerpt from Music to My Ears by John Devine, here it is:
My meanderings into the shaded grove of poetry seemed like the perfect escape from my father’s medical mumbo jumbo until I realized in college that my literature professors often sounded as poetic as a ten-car pileup. I recall in particular one professor who asked us to read a poem by Alexander Pope called The R-ape of the Lock, a humorous poem about a young man who cuts off a wisp of a young woman’s hair. Sounds pretty straightforward, right? Well, before I knew what was what, my young professor demanded that I “deconstruct” the poem and analyze it for evidence of what she called “commodity fet-ishism.” “I want to read the thing,” I told her, “Not pull it apart.” And when I asked her what commodity fet-ishism was, she looked at me as if I were some inferior life form. “Look it up!” Said she, frowning. I had to pull an all-nighter to finish that assignment in time. It wasn't long before she had me writing a paper on the evils of eurocentric curricula. I finally put my foot down when she demanded that I attend her lecture on the perils of Islamaphobia.
By reading this excerpt from "Music to My Ears " by John Devine we can see that the narrator is having a hard time trying to understand what the professor was demanding, then in the quotation, we have the use of jargon as a critic and emphasis of the way the professor miscommunicate because of the insistence of using jargon.