专业八级-256及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级-256 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、PART ONE READING COM(总题数:1,分数:55.00)SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS In this section there are three passages followed by fourteen multiple choice questions. For each multiple choice question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the
2、one that you think is the best answer. PASSAGE ONE (1) Ole and Lena are a mythical Swedish-American couple, probably residing somewhere in Minnesota, notable for their remarkably dysfunctional marriage. One story goes like this: (2) Ole and Lena have grown old, and one day Ole becomes very sick. Eve
3、ntually, he is confined to his upstairs bedroom, barely conscious, bedridden, and growing ever weaker. After several weeks of this, the doctor visits and tells Lena: “Vell, Ole“s just about a goner. I don“t think he“ll survive the night.“ So Lena, being a practical woman, decides she had better star
4、t preparing for all the guests who will be coming to the funeral. She begins to bake, starting with loaves of limpa, a Swedish sweet rye bread. The pleasant smell of baking bread is soon wafting through the house. Suddenly, upstairs, Ole“s nose twitches and his eyes bolt open. “Limpa,“ he says. He j
5、erks up into a sitting position, swings his legs around, and climbs out of bed. It“s like a miracle! Half walking, half stumbling, he crosses the room, enters the hallway, and starts working his way down the stairs. “Limpa,“ he says again. He reaches the ground floor, stumbles across the kitchen, an
6、d pulls himself into a chair by a table where a loaf of freshly sliced bread sits. He reaches over to take a slice. “Stop that, Ole!“ shouts Lena, as she whaps his hand with her spatula. “That limpa bread is for after the funeral.“ (3) We can laugh at Ole and Lena because they are now out of time, c
7、haracters from an earlier era of Swedish immigration to America. Their “ideal type,“ we might say, no longer exists. More importantly, their dysfunctional marriage also belongs to another era. Several generations ago, when there were real Oles and Lenas, divorce would have been rare in their communi
8、ty. For better and worse, couples remained in unhappy or troubled marriages, perhaps “for the sake of the children,“ perhaps for other cultural or religious reasons. (4) Successful jokes usually involve making fun of institutions that are strong and stable. The “marriage joke“, a staple of comedians
9、 during the 1950s and 1960s, seems to be fading in our time. Symbolically, Rodney Dangerfield, perhaps the last master of the marriage joke, died recently. (5) It is hard to make fun of an institution that is battered and bruised. Such are marriage and the family in America. Marriage rates are now a
10、t record lows in our country. The average age of first marriage is at a record high, for both men and women. The proportion of adults who will never marry is also at a record level. At the same time, the marital fertility rate in America is at a record low. Meanwhile, 40 percent of all births are no
11、w outside of wedlock, and this figure is steadily climbing. Cohabitation“living together without benefit of clergy,“ as we used to saygrows ever more popular as an alternative to marriage. While the American divorce rate has been fairly stable for a decade or two, it remains at a high level: one of
12、every two marriages still ends in divorce. Finally, “gay rights activists“ are clamoring for the right to marry, with someif unevensuccess among the states. (6) There are those, such as Harvard historian Nancy Cott, who argue that these changes simply represent the inevitable evolution of marriage a
13、nd family, a natural adaptation of a malleable, plastic-like institution to new conditions. Industrialization, modernization, and the quest for equality, Cott concludes, have freed marriage from the shackles of the past, allowing it to evolve into a higher and better form. (7) There is no doubt that
14、 the Industrial Revolution brought new pressures to bear on what I prefer to call the Natural Family. At the most basic level, this process severed the workplace from the home. For all of human history up to that time, the great majority of humans had lived and worked in the same place, be it a smal
15、l farm or an artisan“s shop or a nomad“s tent. Under the industrial regime, though, adults were pulled out of their homes to labor in factories or offices. Serious complications arose over matters such as sex or gender roles and the care of children. (8) However, in most of Europe and North America,
16、 families recovered a significant degree of autonomy through “family wage“ regimes. Constructed by religious leaders, social reformers, and morally grounded labor unions, family wage systems limited the intrusion of the industrial principle into the family circle. These systems held that the factori
17、es could hire only one person per household, normally the husband and father, and that that person should receive a family sustaining wage. For working-class women, “liberation“ came to mean freedom from having to work in the factories. This allowed mothers to focus on maintaining autonomous homes a
18、nd caring for children. In this way, the natural family rooted in marriage and focused on procreation and child-rearing accommodated itself to the new industrial era. (9) It is also true, though, that “family-wage“ regimes of this kind largely vanished during the last three decades of the twentieth
19、century and are now mostly forgotten. Feminist historians, such as Nancy Cott, see this as an important and most welcome step in the evolution of marriage and family. A more accurate interpretation is that the disappearance of these regimes has been a major cause of the deterioration of marriage and
20、 family life seen since 1965; while such systems had flaws, nothing compensated for the loss of their strengths. Moreover, rather than being an aspect of social evolution, this transformation of private life was the direct result of an ideological project designed to create a post-family order. (10)
21、 This unique ideological effort had both socialist and feminist roots. It was expressed most clearly in Sweden, the ancestral home of Ole and Lena. PASSAGE TWO (1) Among the quality, courtship before the middle of the seventeenth century was usually a stilted and formal affair of short duration and
22、limited significance. The procedure took two forms. The first was the selection of a possible spouse by the parents or friends, after careful examination of his or her economic prospects, and preliminary agreement with the other set of parents and friends about the terms of the financial settlement.
23、 The couple were then brought together, in order to discover whether or not they found each other personally obnoxious. If no strong negative feelings were aroused, the couple normally consented, the marriage settlement was signed, and the arrangement for a formal church wedding went forward. Altern
24、atively, a man might meet or see a girl in a public place, in church, or at a ball or party. If he was attracted to her, he would approach her parents and friends and formally ask their permission to court her. If investigation proved that he was financially and personally suitable, permission was g
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- 专业 256 答案 解析 DOC
