GRE-练习二十一及答案解析.doc
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1、GRE-练习二十一及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、BIndefinite item(总题数:21,分数:64.00)1.When literary periods are defined on the basis of mens writing, womens writing must be forcibly assimilated into an irrelevant grid: a Renaissance that is not a renaissance for women, a Romantic period in which women played ver
2、y little part, a modernism with which women conflict. Simultaneously, the history of womens writing has been suppressed, leaving large, mysterious gaps in accounts of the development of various genres. UFeminist criticism is beginning to correct this situation./U Margaret Anne Doody, for example, su
3、ggests that during “the period between the death of Richardson and the appearance of the novels of Scott and Austen,“ which has “been regarded as a dead period,“ late- eighteenth-century women writers actually developed “the paradigm for womens fiction of the nineteenth centurysomething hardly less
4、than the paradigm of the nineteenth-century novel itself.“ Feminist critics have also pointed out that the twentieth-century writer Virginia Woolf belonged to a tradition other than modernism and that this tradition surfaces in her work precisely where criticism has hitherto found obscurities, evasi
5、ons, implausibilities, and imperfections.The author quotes Doody most probably in order to illustrate A. a contribution that feminist criticism can make to literary criticism. B. a modernist approach that conflicts with womens writing. C. writing by a woman which had previously been ignored. D. the
6、hitherto overlooked significance of Scotts and Austens novels. E. a standard system of defining literary periods.(分数:3.00)A.B.C.D.E.2.The 1973 Endangered Species Act made into legal policy the concept that endangered species of wildlife are precious as part of a natural ecosystem. The nearly unanimo
7、us passage of this act in the United States Congress, reflecting the rising national popularity of environmentalism, masked a bitter debate. Affected industries clung to the former wildlife policy of valuing individual species according to their economic usefulness. UThey fought to minimize the laws
8、 impact by limiting definitions of key terms,/U but they lost on nearly every issue. The act defined “wildlife“ as almost all kinds of animalsfrom large mammals to invertebratesand plants. “Taking“ wildlife was defined broadly as any action that threatened an endangered species; areas vital to a spe
9、cies survival could be federally protected as “critical habitats“. Though these definitions legislated strong environmentalist goals, political compromises made in the enforcement of the act were to determine just what economic interests would be set aside for the sake of ecological stabilization.Th
10、e author refers to the terms “wildlife“ “taking“ and “critical habitats“ most likely in order to: A. illustrate the misuse of scientific language and concepts in political processes. B. emphasize the importance of selecting precise language in transforming scientific concepts into law. C. represent
11、terminology whose definition was crucial in writing environmentalist goals into law. D. demonstrate the triviality of the issues debated by industries before Congress passed the Endangered Species Act. E. show that broad definitions of key terms in many types of laws resulted in ambiguity and thus l
12、eft room for disagreement about how the law should be enforced.(分数:3.00)A.B.C.D.E.3.UHistorians have only recently begun to note the increase in demand for luxury goods and services that took place in eighteenth-century England./U McKendrick has explored the Wedgwood firms remarkable success in mark
13、eting luxury pottery; Plumb has written about the proliferation of provincial theaters, musical festivals, and childrens toys and books. While the fact of this consumer revolution is hardly in doubt, three key questions remain: Who were the consumers? What were their motives? And what were the effec
14、ts of the new demand for luxuries?In the first paragraph, the author mentions McKendrick and Plumb most probably in order to: A. contrast their views on the subject of luxury consumerism in eighteenth-century England. B. indicate the inadequacy of historiographical approaches to eighteenth-century E
15、nglish history. C. give examples of historians who have helped to establish the fact of growing consumerism in eighteenth-century England. D. support the contention that key questions about eighteenth-century consumerism remain to be answered. E. compare one historians interest in luxury goods such
16、as pottery to another historians interest in luxury services such as musical festivals.(分数:3.00)A.B.C.D.E.4.Some recent historians have argued that life in the British colonies in America from approximately 1763 to 1789 was marked by internal conflicts among colonists. UInheritors of some of the vie
17、wpoints of early twentieth-century Progressive historians such as Beard and Becker, these recent historians have put forward arguments that deserve evaluation./UThe kind of conflict most emphasized by these historians is class conflict. Yet with the Revolutionary War dominating these years, how does
18、 one distinguish class conflict within that larger conflict? Certainly not by the side a person supported.The author most likely refers to “historians such as Beard and Becker“ in order to: A. isolate the two historians whose work is most representative of the viewpoints of Progressive historians. B
19、. emphasize the need to find connections between recent historical writing and the work of earlier historians. C. make a case for the importance of the views of the Progressive historians concerning eighteenth-century American life. D. suggest that Progressive historians were the first to discover t
20、he particular internal conflicts in eighteenth-century American life mentioned in the passage. E. point out historians whose views of history anticipated some of the views of the recent historians mentioned in the passage.(分数:3.00)A.B.C.D.E.5.From the 1900s through the 1950s waitresses in the United
21、 States developed a form of unionism based on the unions defining the skills that their occupation included and enforcing standards for the performance of those skills. UThis “occupational unionism“ differed substantially from the “worksite unionism“ prevalent among factory. workers./U Rather than u
22、nionizing the workforces of particular employers, waitress locals sought to control their occupation throughout a city. Occupational unionism operated through union hiring halls, which provided free placement services to employers who agreed to hire their personnel only through the union. Hiring hal
23、ls offered union waitresses collective employment security, not individual job securitya basic protection offered by worksite unions. That is, when a waitress lost her job, the local did not intervene with her employer but placed her elsewhere; and when jobs were scarce, the work hours available wer
24、e distributed fairly among all members rather than being assigned according to seniority.The author of the passage mentions “particular employers“ primarily in order to A. suggest that occupational unions found some employers difficult to satisfy. B. indicate that the occupational unions served some
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- GRE 练习 十一 答案 解析 DOC
