大学英语六级283及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级 283 及答案解析(总分:428.03,做题时间:132 分钟)一、Part I Writing (3(总题数:1,分数:30.00)1.For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay entitled Students Union, Associations and Personal Development. You should write at least 150 words following the outline given below. 1大学里学生会和各种社团的现状 2参加学生会和各
2、种社团对个人发展的作用 3我的观念中大学生对待学生会和社团活动的正确态度 (分数:30.00)_二、Part II Reading C(总题数:1,分数:71.00)Will the World Remember Disney or Plato? Significant Worldwide Influence of American Culture LONDONDown in the mall, between the fast-food joint and the bagel shop, a group of young people huddles in a flurry of baggy
3、 combat pants, skateboards, and slang. They size up a woman teetering past wearing DKNY, carrying Time magazine in one hand and a latte in the other. She brushes past a guy in a Yankees baseball cap who is talking on his Motorola cellphone about the Martin Scorsese film he saw last night. Its a stan
4、dard American sceneonly this isnt America, its Britain. U.S. culture is so pervasive that the scene could be played out in any one of dozens of cities. As a global superpower, America exports its culture on an unprecedented scale. From music to media, film to fast food, language to literature and sp
5、ort, the American idea is spreading inexorably (不可阻挡地), not unlike the influence of empires that preceded it. The difference is that todays technology flings culture to every corner of the globe with blinding speed. If it took two millenniums for Platos “Republic“ to reach North America, the latest
6、hit from Justin Timberlake can be found in Greek (and Japanese) stores within days. Sometimes, U.S. ideals get transmittedsuch as individual rights, freedom of speech, and respect for womenand local cultures are enriched. At other times, materialism or worse becomes the message and local traditions
7、get crushed. “The U.S. has become the most powerful, significant world force in terms of cultural imperialism and expansion,“ says Ian Ralston, American studies director at Liverpool John Moores University. “The areas that particularly spring to mind are Hollywood, popular music, and even literature
8、.“ But what some call “McDomination“ has created a backlash (强烈反应) in certain cultures. And its not clear whether fast food, Disney, or rocknroll will change the world the way Homer or Shakespeare has. Hollywood rules the global movie market, with up to 90 percent of audiences in some European count
9、ries. Even in Africa, two of three films shown are American. Few countries have yet to be touched by McDonalds and Coca-Cola. Starbucks recently opened up a new front in South America, and everyones got a Hard Rock Caf T-shirt from somewhere exotic. West Indian sports enthusiasts increasingly watch
10、basketball, not cricket. Baseball has long since taken root in Asia and Cuba. And Chinese young people are becoming more captivated by American football and basketball, some even printing the names of NBA stars on their school sweatsuits. American English is the language of choice for would-be pop s
11、tars in Europe, software programmers in India, and Internet surfers everywhere. Americas preeminence is hardly surprising. Superpowers have throughout the ages sought to perpetuate their way of life: from the philosophy and mythology of the ancient Greeks to the law and language of the Romans; from
12、the art and architecture of the Tang Dynasty and Renaissance Italy to the sports and systems of government of the British. “Most empires think their own point of view is the only correct point of view,“ says Robert Young, an expert in postcolonial cultural theory at Oxford University. “Its the certa
13、inty they get because of the power they have, and they expect to impose it on everyone else.“ Threats of American Cultural Domination Detractors of cultural imperialism argue, however, that cultural domination poses a totalitarian threat to diversity. In the American case, “McDomination“ poses sever
14、al dangers. First, local industries are truly at risk of extinction because of U.S. oligopolies (寡头卖主垄断), such as Hollywood. For instance in 2000, the European Union handed out one billion euros to subsidise (资助) Europes film industry. Even the relatively successful British movie industry has no con
15、trol over distribution, which is almost entirely in the hands of the Hollywood majors. Second, political cultures are being transformed by the personality-driven American model in countries as far-reaching as Japan and the Philippines. Finally, U.S. domination of technologies such as the Internet an
16、d satellite TV means that, increasingly, America monopolizes the view people get of the world. According to a recent report for the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development, 13 of the top 14 Internet firms are American. No. 14 is British. “You have to know English if you want to use the Internet,“ s
17、ays Andre Kaspi, a professor at the Sorbonne in Paris. A main problem is that culture is no longer a protected species, but subject to the inexorable drive for free trade, says Joost Smiers, a political science professor at the Utrecht School of the Arts. This means that it is increasingly difficult
18、 for countries to protect their own industries. France tries to do so with subsidies, while South Korea has tried quotas. Such “protectionist“ tactics meet with considerable U.S. muscle, Dr. Smiers says. “Americas aggressive cultural policy. hinders national states from regulating their own cultural
19、 markets,“ he says. “We should take culture out of the WTO.“ Resistance to American Cultural Influence A backlash is being felt in certain places. In Japan, locals have taken U.S. ideas like hip-hop and fast food, and given them a Japanese twist, says Dominic Al-Badri, editor of Kansai Time Out. In
20、Germany, there is still strong resistance to aspects of U.S. pop culture, though there is an appetite for its intellectual culture, says Gary Smith, director of the American Academy in Berlin. In France, resistance is growing partly because of frustrations over the Iraq warbut partly because America
21、nization is already so advanced in the country, says Mr. Kaspi. France has repeatedly tried to mandate the use of French language in official capacities to check the advance of English. “But most of the time, the law is impossible to apply, because if you want to be understood around the world you h
22、ave to speak English,“ Kaspi says. In the Philippines, even the best U.S. ideals have caused complications. “The pervasive American influence has saddled us with two legacies,“ notes respected local commentator Antonio C. Abaya. “American-style elections, which require the commitment of massive fina
23、ncial resources, which have to be recouped (偿还) and rolled over many times, which is the main source of corruption in government; and American-style free press in which media feel free to attack and criticize everything that the government does or says, which adds to disunity and loss of confidence
24、in government.“ Meanwhile, for all the strength of the U.S. movie industry, sometimes a foreign film resonates more with a local audience than a Hollywood productionand outperforms it. For instance, Japans “Spirited Away“ (2001) remains the top-grossing film in that country, surpassing global Hollyw
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