更多“Thanks to the militant feminist movement of the()led by Mrs.Pankhurst before the First World War,votes were granted to women over 30 in 1918.A、LudditesB、SuffragettesC、ChartistsD、Levellers”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    Fresh vegetables were ______during the World War II.

    A、lack

    B、scarce

    C、little

    D、sparse


    参考答案:B

  • 第2题:

    Martin Luther King,the great Black leader in the movement against racial discrimination,was( )the Nobel Prize for peace for his outstanding contribution to world peace.

    A.rewarded
    B.awarded
    C.conferred
    D.granted

    答案:B
    解析:
    award“颁发,授予”,后接双宾语。A.reward“报答,报酬”。用法是reward sb.(with money or sth.else for sth.done);C.confer“授予”,用法是confer sth.on sb.,不接双宾语;D.grant“授予(财产或拨款)”。

  • 第3题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Florence Nightingale

    Florence Nightingale was born in Florence,Italy,while her wealthy English parents
    were traveling in Europe.As a child,she traveled to many places with her family and
    learned how to speak several languages.
    When Nightingale was 17,she told her family that she was going to help sick people.
    Her parents did not approve,but Nightingale was determined.
    She traveled to hospitals all over Europe.She saw that doctors were working too hard.
    She saw that patients died because they did not get enough care.Nightingale felt that
    women could be doing more to help doctors take care of sick people.
    Nightingale knew that in order for nurses to do more,they needed special training in
    how to take care of sick people.Nightingale went to a hospital in Germany to study nursing.
    Then she returned to London and became the head of a group of women called
    Gentlewomen During Illness.These women cared for sick people in their homes.
    In 1854,England was fighting a war with Russia.War reporters wrote about the
    terrible conditions in the hospitals that cared for the wounded.People demanded that
    something be done about it.A leader of the government asked Florence Nightingale to take
    some nurses into the war hospitals.So,in November 1854,Nightingale finally got to work
    in a hospital.
    She took along 38 nurses whom she had trained herself.
    At first,the doctors on the battlefields did not want Nightingale and her nurses in their
    hospitals.They did not believe that women could help.But in fact,the nurses did make a
    difference.They worked around the clock,tending the sick.Thanks to their hard work,
    many wounded soldiers survived.
    After the war,Nightingale and her nurses were treated like heroes.Finally,in 1860,
    she started the Nightingale School for Nurses.In time,thanks to Florence Nightingale,
    nursing became an important part of medicine.

    It was not until the war with Russia that Nightingale
    A:got to work in a hospital.
    B:began to study nursing.
    C:started to care for sick people in their homes.
    D:became the head of Gentlewomen During Illness.

    答案:A
    解析:

  • 第4题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Florence Nightingale

    Florence Nightingale was born in Florence,Italy,while her wealthy English parents
    were traveling in Europe.As a child,she traveled to many places with her family and
    learned how to speak several languages.
    When Nightingale was 17,she told her family that she was going to help sick people.
    Her parents did not approve,but Nightingale was determined.
    She traveled to hospitals all over Europe.She saw that doctors were working too hard.
    She saw that patients died because they did not get enough care.Nightingale felt that
    women could be doing more to help doctors take care of sick people.
    Nightingale knew that in order for nurses to do more,they needed special training in
    how to take care of sick people.Nightingale went to a hospital in Germany to study nursing.
    Then she returned to London and became the head of a group of women called
    Gentlewomen During Illness.These women cared for sick people in their homes.
    In 1854,England was fighting a war with Russia.War reporters wrote about the
    terrible conditions in the hospitals that cared for the wounded.People demanded that
    something be done about it.A leader of the government asked Florence Nightingale to take
    some nurses into the war hospitals.So,in November 1854,Nightingale finally got to work
    in a hospital.
    She took along 38 nurses whom she had trained herself.
    At first,the doctors on the battlefields did not want Nightingale and her nurses in their
    hospitals.They did not believe that women could help.But in fact,the nurses did make a
    difference.They worked around the clock,tending the sick.Thanks to their hard work,
    many wounded soldiers survived.
    After the war,Nightingale and her nurses were treated like heroes.Finally,in 1860,
    she started the Nightingale School for Nurses.In time,thanks to Florence Nightingale,
    nursing became an important part of medicine.

    Nightingale's parents did not approve of her decision
    A:to work as a doctor.
    B:to care for sick people.
    C:to fight in the war with Russia.
    D:to travel to hospitals all over Europe.

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第5题:

    共用题干
    第二篇

    Florence Nightingale

    Florence Nightingale was born in Florence , ltaly , while her wealthy English parents
    were traveling in Europe. As a child, she traveled to many places with her family and
    learned how to speak several languages.
    When Nightingale was 1 7 , she told her family that she was going to help sick people.
    Her parents did not approve,but Nightingale was determined.
    She traveled to hospitals all over Europe.She saw that doctors were working too hard.
    She saw that patients died because they did not get enough care.Nightingale felt that
    women could be doing more to help doctors take care of sick people.
    Nightingale knew that in order for nurses to do more,they needed special training
    in how to take care of sick people.Nightingale went to a hospital in Germany to study
    nursing.Then she returned to London and became the head of a group of women
    called Gentlewomen During Illness.These women cared for sick people in their homes.
    In 1854,England was fighting a war with Russia.War reporters wrote about the
    terrible conditions in the hospitals that cared for the wounded.People demanded that
    something be done about it.A leader of the government asked Florence Nightingale to take
    some nurses into the war hospitals.So,in November 1854,Nightingale finally got to work
    in a hospital.
    She took along 38 nurses whom she had trained herself.
    At first,the doctors on the battlefields did not want Nightingale and her nurses in their
    hospitals.They did not believe that women could help.But in fact,the nurses did make a
    difference.They worked around the clock,tending the sick.Thanks to their hard work,
    many wounded soldiers survived.
    After the war,Nightingale and her nurses were treated like heroes.Finally,in 1860,
    she started the Nightingale School for Nurses.In time,thanks to Florence Nightingale,
    nursing became an important part of medicine.

    Nightingale played a great role in
    A:the building of war hospitals.
    B:the education of women.
    C:the development of nursing.
    D:the improvement of working conditions for women.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第6题:

    As a result of the First World War settlement the()was established in 1920.

    ALeague of Nations

    BBritish Commonwealth

    CBritish East India Company

    DUnited Nations


    A

  • 第7题:

    Thanks to the militant feminist movement of the()led by Mrs.Pankhurst before the First World War,votes were granted to women over 30 in 1918.

    ALuddites

    BSuffragettes

    CChartists

    DLevellers


    B

  • 第8题:

    单选题
    According to the passage, which of the following is true of the Seneca Falls conference on women’s rights?
    A

    It was primarily a product of nineteenth-century Saint-Simonian feminist thought.

    B

    It was the work of American activists who were independent of feminists abroad.

    C

    It was the culminating achievement of the Utopian socialist movement.

    D

    It was a manifestation of an international movement for social change and feminism


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    由文章第一段倒数第二句可知,在欧洲意识形态,包括乌托邦社会主义思想的影响之下,美国女权主义开始普及,而1848年召开的Seneca Falls Conference则使这一运动达到了顶峰。因此这次会议便成为女权运动发展的一个典型体现。D选项正是此意。

  • 第9题:

    单选题
    The author quotes James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and D. H. Lawrence primarily in order to show that ______.
    A

    these were feminist writers

    B

    although well-intentioned, they were ineffectual

    C

    before the 20th century there was little interest in women’s literature

    D

    modern literature is dependent on the women’s movement

    E

    the interest in feminist issues is not new


    正确答案: E
    解析:
    文段中提到的这三位作家都是20世纪初期的现代主义作家,根据文意可以发现,三者都强调了女性独立与解放在社会历史中的巨大作用,说明当时的人们已经开始关注女性问题,由此可见,E项是正确选项。

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    After World War I political unrest in Britain led to()general elections in just over 5 years.
    A

    2

    B

    3

    C

    4

    D

    5


    正确答案: C
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第11题:

    问答题
    Passage 2The History of Women’s Suffrage  A  In the early nineteenth century, women were considered second-class citizens whose existence was limited to the interior life of the home and care of the children. Women were considered subsets of their husbands, and after marriage they did not have the right to own property, maintain their wages, or sign a contract, much less vote. It was expected that women be obedient wives, never to hold a thought or opinion independent of their husbands. It was considered improper for women to travel alone or to speak in public. With the belief that intense physical or intellectual activity would be injurious to the delicate female biology and reproductive system, women were taught to refrain from pursuing any serious education. Silently perched in their birdcages, women were considered merely objects of beauty, and were looked upon as intellectually and physically inferior to men. This belief in women’s inferiority to men was further reinforced by organized religion which preached strict and well-defined sex roles.  B The Seneca Falls Convention  The women’s suffrage movement was formally set into motion in 1848 with the first Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, New York.  The catalyst for this gathering was the World Anti-Slavery Convention held in 1840 in London and attended by an American delegation which included a number of women. In attendance were Lucretia Mort and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who were forced to sit in the galleries as observers because they were women. This poor treatment did not rest well with these women of progressive thoughts, and it was decided that they would hold their own convention to “discuss the social, civil and religious rights of women”.  Using The Declaration of Independence as a guideline, Stanton presented her Declaration of Principles in her hometown chapel and brought to light women’s subordinate status and made recommendations for change.  Resolution 9 requesting the right to vote was perhaps the most important in that it expressed the demand for sexual equality. Subsequent to the Seneca Falls Convention, the demand for the vote became the centerpiece of the women’s rights movement.  C  Suffrage During the Civil War  During the Civil War, women’s suffrage was eclipsed by the war effort and movement for the abolition of slavery. While annual conventions were held on a regular basis, there was much discussion but little action. Activists such as slave-born Sojourner Truth, Elizabeth Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony lectured and petitioned the government for the emancipation of slaves with the belief that, once the war was over, women and slaves alike would be granted the same rights as the white men. At the end of the war, however, the government saw the suffrage of women and that of the negro as two separate issues and it was decided that the negro vote could produce the immediate political gain, particularly in the South, that the women’s vote could not.  Abraham Lincoln declared, “This hour belongs to the negro.”  D  Women Unite  With the side-stepping of women’s rights, women activists became enraged, and the American Equal Rights Association was established by Stanton and her colleagues in 1866 in effort to organize in the fight for women’s rights. In 1868, the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment proved an affront to the women’s movement, as it defined “citizenship” and “voters” as “male”, and raised the question as to whether women were considered citizens of the United States at all. The exclusion of women was further reinforced with the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment in 1870, which enfranchised black men. In a disagreement over these Amendments, the women’s movement split into two factions. In New York, Stanton and Anthony established the radical National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA). Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe, and Henry Blackwell organized the more conservative American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) in Boston. These two groups later merged in 1890 to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) under the leadership of Elizabeth Cady Stanton.  E  Winning the Vote  Susan B. Anthony was arrested for attempting to vote for Ulysses S. Grant in the 1872 presidential election. Six years later, in 1878, a Women’s Suffrage Amendment was introduced to U.S. Congress. With the formation of numerous groups, such as the Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), the National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW), the National Association of Colored Women (NACW) and, the Women’s Trade Union League, the women’s movement gained a full head of steam during the 1890’s and early 1900’s. The U.S. involvement in World War I in 1918 slowed down the suffrage campaign as women pitched in for the war effort. However, in 1919, after years of petitioning, picketing, and protest parades, the Nineteenth Amendment was passed by both houses of Congress and in 1920 it became ratified under the presidency of Woodrow Wilson.  F Amendment xix  1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.  2. Congress shall have power to enforce this Article by appropriate legislation. (Ratified August 26, 1920)  G  Equal Rights Amendment  Upon this victory of the vote, the NAWSA disbanded as an organization, giving birth to the League of Women Voters. The vote was not enough to secure women’s equal rights according to Alice Paul, founder of the National Woman’s Party (NWP), who moved to take women’s rights one step further by proposing the Equal Rights Amendment (E.R.A.) to Congress in 1923. This demand to eliminate discrimination on the basis of gender failed to pass.  The push for the E.R.A. continued on a state-by-state basis, until the newly formed National Organization for Women (NOW) launched a national campaign during the 1960’s.  Despite many heated debates and protests, the E.R.A., while passed by Congress in 1972, has never been ratified.  Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?  In boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet, write  TRUE       if the statement agrees with the information  FALSE       if the statement contradicts the information  NOT GIVEN     if there is no information on this  1. In the early nineteenth century it was generally believed that men and women performed different roles in society.  2. The World Anti-Slavery Convention preceded the first Women’s Right Convention.  3. During the American Civil War, the Women’s suffrage movement flourished.  4. Men were not allowed to join the National Woman Suffrage Association.  5. The National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) was less radical than the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA).  6. Abraham Lincoln was not sympathetic to the women’s movement.

    正确答案: 1. TRUE
    (根据题干关键词early nineteenth century, men and women, different roles可定位到原文A第一段的首句“In the early nineteenth century, women were considered second-class citizens whose existence was limited to the interior life of the home and care of the children”,由此可知在19世纪早期女性被视为二等公民,只能在家中做家务或照顾孩子,所以题干表述是正确的。因而答案为TRUE。)
    2. TRUE
    (根据题干关键词The World Ant-Slavery Convention (ASC)和first Women’s Right Convention (WRC)可定位到B第二段的第一句“The catalyst for this gathering was the World Anti-Slavery Convention held in 1840 in London and attended by an American delegation which included a number of women”,其中this gathering指的就是女权运动,因此可知题干表述是完全正确的。因而答案为TRUE。)
    3. FALSE
    (根据题干关键词American Civil War和flourished可定位到原文C部分首句“During the Civil War, women’s suffrage was eclipsed by the war effort and movement for the abolition of slavery”,文中eclipsed意思是“遮暗,使失色”,因此可知在内战期间女性选举权运动受到了影响,因此题干表述是不符合原文的。因而答案是FALSE。)
    4. NOT GIVEN
    (根据题干关键词National Woman Suffrage Association可定位到原文D部分尾句“Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe, and Henry Blackwell organized the more conservative American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) in Boston. These two groups later merged in 1890 to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) under the leadership of Elizabeth Cady Stanton”,该句中并未提到男人是否可以加入全国妇女选举协会这个组织,因而答案是NOT GIVEN。)
    5. FALSE
    (根据题干关键词National Woman Suffrage Association(NWSA), less radical和American Woman Suffrage Association(AWSA)可定位到D部分倒数第一、二句“Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe, and Henry Blackwell organized the more conservative American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) in Boston. These two groups later merged in 1890 to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) under the leadership of Elizabeth Cady Stanton”,通过这句话可知AWSA更保守一些,因此,可知答案应该是FALSE。)
    6. NOT GIVEN
    (根据题干关键词Abraham Lincoln和not sympathetic可定位到原文C段尾句“Abraham Lincoln declared, ‘This hour belongs to the negro’”,这句话只是林肯对黑人说的一句话,并不是它对于女权运动的态度,因此,答案是NOT GIVEN。)
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第12题:

    问答题
    Practice 6  Then came the First World War and the Second World War. (1) After each war, new ideas, new attitudes, new trades and occupations were revealed to villagers. The long-established order of society was no longer taken for granted. Electricity and the motorcar were steadily operating to make “village life” and “town life” almost alike. (2) Now with the highly developed science and technology and high-level social welfare for all, there is no point whatever in talking any longer about “village life.” It is just life, and that a better life.

    正确答案:
    (1) 每次战争后,村民们都会发现新的观点、新的态度、新的行业以及新的职业。
    (2) 现在,科学技术高度发达,全民享有高水平社会福利,完全没有任何必要再谈论“乡村生活”。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第13题:

    Directions: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A ,B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET I . ( 10 points)

    In the United States, the first day-nursery was opened in 1854. Nurseries were established in various areas during the

    (1) half of the 19th century; most of (2) were charitable. Both in Europe and in the U. S. the day nursery movement received great (3) during the First World War, when (4) of manpower caused the industrial employment of unprecedented numbers of women.

    In some European countries nurseries were established (5) in munitions plants, under direct government sponsorship. (6) the number of nurseries in the U.S. also rose (7) , this rise was accomplished without government aid of any kind. During the years following the First World War, (8) , Federal, State, and local governments gradually began to exercise a measure of control (9) the day-nurseries, chiefly by (10) them and by inspecting and regulating the conditions within the nursries.

    The (11) of the Second World War was quickly followed by an increase in the number of day-nurseries in almost all countries, ms women were (12) called upon to replace men in the factories.

    On this (13) the U.S. government immediately crone to the support of the nursery schools, (14) $ 6,000, 000 in July, 1942. for a nursery- school program for the children of working mothers.

    Many States and local communities (15) this Federal aid. By the end of the war, in August, 1945, more than 100,000 children were being cared (16) in daycare centers receiving Federal (17) . Soon afterward, the Federal government (18) cut down its expenditures for this purpose and later (19) them, causing a sharp drop in the number of nursery schools in operation. However, the expectation that most employed mothers would leave their (20) at the end of the war was only partly fulfilled.

    1. A) latter

    B) late

    C) other

    D) first


    正确答案:A
    答案:A
    [试题分析]推断选问题。
    [详细解答]由第一句话可知,第一家日托幼稚园于1854年建立.而各地的幼稚园在此后相继建起,故选A。 the latter half of the l9th century指19世纪晚些时期,而the late half of the l9th century即指19世纪末期。

  • 第14题:

    What if there had been a way to avoid this trade war well before it started, a strategy thatthe conditions that led to the trade war before they became problematic.

    A、would address
    B、had addressed
    C、would have addressed
    D、addressed

    答案:B
    解析:
    本题考查动词的时态。根据题千已有的谓语动词there had beenaway可看出a way就是指的a strategy,空白处的动词与主句there had beenaway属于同一时间,所以空白处也需用过去完成时。第二种方法,从第二个分句的语义着手。本题千意为:要是我们能在贸易战开始之前,找到一种能有效避免贸易战的策略,使该策略,在引发贸易战的条件变成熟之前,就解决它们。第二分句是指:该项策略要能在they became problematic之前,就解决这些条件。所以,发生在一般过去时之前,即为过去完成时。综合所述,本题选B。

  • 第15题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Florence Nightingale

    Florence Nightingale was born in Florence,Italy,while her wealthy English parents
    were traveling in Europe.As a child,she traveled to many places with her family and
    learned how to speak several languages.
    When Nightingale was 17,she told her family that she was going to help sick people.
    Her parents did not approve,but Nightingale was determined.
    She traveled to hospitals all over Europe.She saw that doctors were working too hard.
    She saw that patients died because they did not get enough care.Nightingale felt that
    women could be doing more to help doctors take care of sick people.
    Nightingale knew that in order for nurses to do more,they needed special training in
    how to take care of sick people.Nightingale went to a hospital in Germany to study nursing.
    Then she returned to London and became the head of a group of women called
    Gentlewomen During Illness.These women cared for sick people in their homes.
    In 1854,England was fighting a war with Russia.War reporters wrote about the
    terrible conditions in the hospitals that cared for the wounded.People demanded that
    something be done about it.A leader of the government asked Florence Nightingale to take
    some nurses into the war hospitals.So,in November 1854,Nightingale finally got to work
    in a hospital.
    She took along 38 nurses whom she had trained herself.
    At first,the doctors on the battlefields did not want Nightingale and her nurses in their
    hospitals.They did not believe that women could help.But in fact,the nurses did make a
    difference.They worked around the clock,tending the sick.Thanks to their hard work,
    many wounded soldiers survived.
    After the war,Nightingale and her nurses were treated like heroes.Finally,in 1860,
    she started the Nightingale School for Nurses.In time,thanks to Florence Nightingale,
    nursing became an important part of medicine.

    Nightingale played a great role in
    A:the building of war hospitals.
    B:the education of women.
    C:the development of nursing.
    D:the improvement of working conditions for women.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第16题:

    共用题干
    第二篇

    Florence Nightingale

    Florence Nightingale was born in Florence , ltaly , while her wealthy English parents
    were traveling in Europe. As a child, she traveled to many places with her family and
    learned how to speak several languages.
    When Nightingale was 1 7 , she told her family that she was going to help sick people.
    Her parents did not approve,but Nightingale was determined.
    She traveled to hospitals all over Europe.She saw that doctors were working too hard.
    She saw that patients died because they did not get enough care.Nightingale felt that
    women could be doing more to help doctors take care of sick people.
    Nightingale knew that in order for nurses to do more,they needed special training
    in how to take care of sick people.Nightingale went to a hospital in Germany to study
    nursing.Then she returned to London and became the head of a group of women
    called Gentlewomen During Illness.These women cared for sick people in their homes.
    In 1854,England was fighting a war with Russia.War reporters wrote about the
    terrible conditions in the hospitals that cared for the wounded.People demanded that
    something be done about it.A leader of the government asked Florence Nightingale to take
    some nurses into the war hospitals.So,in November 1854,Nightingale finally got to work
    in a hospital.
    She took along 38 nurses whom she had trained herself.
    At first,the doctors on the battlefields did not want Nightingale and her nurses in their
    hospitals.They did not believe that women could help.But in fact,the nurses did make a
    difference.They worked around the clock,tending the sick.Thanks to their hard work,
    many wounded soldiers survived.
    After the war,Nightingale and her nurses were treated like heroes.Finally,in 1860,
    she started the Nightingale School for Nurses.In time,thanks to Florence Nightingale,
    nursing became an important part of medicine.

    Nightingale's parents did not approve of her decision
    A:to work as a doctor.
    B:to care for sick people.
    C:to fight in the war with Russia.
    D:to travel to hospitals all over Europe.

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第17题:

    __________ was a protest movement by American youth that arose in the late 1960s.

    A.Free Speech Movement
    B.The Women's Movement
    C.Anti-War Movement
    D.Counter Culture Movement

    答案:D
    解析:
    考查英美概况知识。Free Speech Movement“言论自由运动”是1964年的加州大学伯克利分校的伯克利言论自由运动:The Women’s Movement“女权运动”是20世纪六七十年代解放女性思想,帮助她们获得自由、取得普遍平等的社会地位的美国女权运动;Anti—War Movement“反战运动”是60年代美国国民因对和平的渴求而发起的一场运动:Counter Culture Movement“反正统文化运动”是美国青年们以自己独特的方式来反对传统文化的价值观念和道德观念存在着某种传承的运动。故选D。

  • 第18题:

    After World War I political unrest in Britain led to()general elections in just over 5 years.

    A2

    B3

    C4

    D5


    C

  • 第19题:

    问答题
    Expressionism  Expressionism is an art movement that produced a wealth of wonderful works of art, and the lives of the artists who created them were no less colorful and exciting. The word expressionism can be used to describe art from different times and places, most of them were part of a movement that took place in Germany from 1905 to 1920. They shared some of the beliefs. Those beliefs were that art should try to change society, to make it less conservative. It should express the energy of nature—following in the footsteps of Vincent van Gogh—-and personal feeling rather than simply representing nature. It should feel uncomfortable, which means it should challenge the traditional ways of looking at the world. This differed from the opinion of Henri Matisse who believed that art should be comfortable. Expressionist art should be inspired by folk art, and the art of what were then called primitive people, for example from Africa.  The aim of the Expressionists was to express personal feeling about what they were painting rather than representing it exactly as it was. It should have strong colors and shapes, be relatively direct, untutored and unplanned and should still contain recognizable things, but not be realistic. The lines could be distorted, and the colors could be strengthened or changed as in the art movement that began in 1905 called Fauvism.  Expressionism was more than a style in painting. It could be found in theatre and cinema, literature and architecture. It was a sharing of ideas and experiences across all these media. The life stories of the Expressionist artists show just how much they had in common. Many began by studying applied art, such as furniture design, often to please their parents. Although they later made more personal art, they continued to make use of those technical skills. Both art critics and the public received this new movement with derision and outrage. Expressionist artists were trying to shock by challenging the traditional, conservative views held by many people. Gradually, however, it became accepted and even admired.  All the Expressionists were affected by World War I (1914-18). Some fled from Germany and spent the war years in exile. Some never returned to their homeland. Most served in the war and some were killed. At first some of them hoped a war would change society for the better but they were soon disillusioned when they saw the destruction and suffering that it caused. In the years after the war, many Expressionist artist revealed the horrors they experienced in their work.  After World War I, Expressionism became very fashionable in Germany, where art was allowed to flourish. This freedom ended in 1933 when Hitler declared all Expressionists were degenerate. This led to them being sacked from their jobs or forced to leave Germany. In 1937 the Nazis took thousands of art works from German museums and put them in an enormous exhibition called the Degenerate Art Exhibition, to show how bad and decadent this art was. It presented a view of the world that went against their political and cultural ambitions to rid Germany of all inferior races.

    正确答案: 【参考译文】
    表现主义 表现主义是20世纪初至30年代盛行于欧美一些国家的艺术流派。它首先出现于美术界,后来在音乐、文学、戏剧以及电影等领域得到重大发展。艺术家们从丰富多彩的现实生活中提取素材,创作了大量优秀的艺术作品。虽然表现主义涵盖的范围很广,但本书中所提到的这些表现主义画家是1905年至1920年间,活跃在德国表现主义运动的舞台上的那部分群体。书中其他被提及的作家,有的是用作品影响了这些画家的创作,有的与这些画家有着共同的创作理念。在理念上,表现主义强调反传统,表现主义画家对社会现状不满,要求变革。受凡·高艺术的影响,在创作上,他们不满足于对客观事物的摹写,要求进一步表现事物的内在实质,突破对人的行为和人所处的环境的描绘,揭示人的灵魂和内心的感情世界,以此来引起观众的强烈震撼和共鸣,它给人们提供了看待周围世界的全新视角。表现主义的这一创作观点与野兽派亨利·马蒂斯的观点很不一致,后者认为艺术应该能给人带来内心的祥和与平静,起到抚慰的作用。
    表现主义画家在创作过程中改变了以往以写实为主的油画传统,注重通过作品来表达画家个人的真实情感。表现主义的创作受到民间艺术和原始艺术,如非洲艺术的启发。其作品大都色彩鲜艳,轮廓粗犷,虽然在其间也能看见具体的形象,但绝不写实。它们直接、纯朴、直觉地表达了画家的情感。与野兽派的技法较为相近,它擅长运用扭曲的线条或是粗犷的色彩轮廓。
    表现主义的影响不仅仅局限于美术界,其创作理念在戏剧、电影、文学以及建筑领域中都有所体现。表现主义画家的生平也有着许多共同之处,比如为了讨好父母,他们大都从学习应用工艺美术起步,如家居设计等。尽管他们后来也有了自己个性化的创作,但这些实用技巧仍会在他们的作品中有所体现。因为试图通过这种新的创作方式向传统而保守的社会观念发起挑战,在出现之初,便受到艺术评论家的公然嘲笑,引起了公众的极度愤慨。不过,随着时代的变迁,它逐渐为人们所接受,甚至成为年轻人崇拜的对象。
    第一次世界大战对表现主义画家影响很大。战争期间,他们有的逃离了德国,过着流亡的生活,有些从此就再也没能回去。他们中的大多数都参加了战争,有的在战斗中不幸牺牲。参战之初,他们对战争抱有幻想,期望它能使这个腐化的世界变得更美好,但是战争爆发后不久,这个幻想就破灭了。在亲眼目睹了无数的流血、牺牲、人们流离失所、痛苦挣扎的情景之后,这些画家的精神受到了极大的摧残,战后纷纷在作品中对当时所经历的恐惧和伤害进行了刻画。
    一战结束后,百废待兴,表现主义也在德国风靡一时,成为主流艺术。1933年,希特勒上台,情况随之发生了变化。在表现主义作品中,希特勒看到了不利于德国当时所采取的种族灭绝政策的倾向,便宣布表现主义画家都是“堕落分子”。他们在德国社会中已无立足之地,纷纷失去了工作,被迫离开祖国。1937年,纳粹当局从德国博物馆搜罗出上千幅表现主义作品,并组织了一场名为“堕落艺术”的大型展览,以此来宣扬这种艺术形式的腐朽和败坏。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第20题:

    单选题
    According to the passage, which of the following statements about the Tuskegee Airmen is TRUE?
    A

    In World WarⅡ, they never lost a bomber to enemy fire.

    B

    They were the first group of black soldiers ever trained by the ground troops.

    C

    They were not subjected to racial discrimination in the army.

    D

    They were already soldiers in the ground troops before their training at Tuskegee began.


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    细节理解题。根据文章的第三段第二句“They did not lose any of the bombers they were escorting”可知,在战争中,他们从来没有失去他们护航的任何一架轰炸机。而A项说的是他们没有遗失一架轰炸机给敌人火力。与A项说法一致,所以A是正确选项。根据文中第二段“The first African-American airmen reported for duty in l941.”可知,他们是第一批报到的空军,而B项的描述是他们是第一批受陆军训练的黑人士兵,原文并没有提到这一点,所以B项错误。根据文中第一段“separated you from other soldiers because of the color of your skin”以及后面的第三,四段可知,他们即使在军队里也被歧视,也受到了种族歧视的影响,C项描述完全相反。由文中第二段第二句“Before that, African Americans could only serve in the Armed Forces as part of the ground troops.”可知,第一批被训练的空军之前是作为地面部队的一部分为武装部队服役,服役指的是参加部队的劳动或是参军,所以不代表他们都是地面部队的士兵。故D项错误。

  • 第21题:

    单选题
    After the First World War, the author Anais Nin became interested in the art movement known as Surrealism and in psychoanalysis, both _____ her novels and short stories.
    A

    in which the influence

    B

    to have influence on

    C

    of which influenced on

    D

    its influence in


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    句意:第一次世界大战后,作家Anais Nin开始对超现实主义的艺术运动和精神分析感兴趣,二者均对其长篇小说和短篇小说的创作产生了影响。A、D两项带入题干均构不成完整的语法,C项中influence是用作了动词,而作动词时它是及物的,后不需要加介词on。B项中不定式作定语,修饰both;both及后面的部分作Surrealism和psychoanalysis的同位语。

  • 第22题:

    问答题
    Practice 5  Expressionism was more than a style in painting. It could be found in theatre and cinema, literature and architecture. It was a sharing of ideas and experiences across all these media. The life stories of the Expressionist artists show just how much they had in common. Many began by studying applied art, such as furniture design, often to please their parents. Although they later made more personal art, they continued to make use of those technical skills. Both art critics and the public received this new movement with derision and outrage. Expressionist artists were trying to shock by challenging the traditional, conservative views held by many people. Gradually, however, it became accepted and even admired.  All the Expressionists were affected by World War I (1914-18). Some fled from Germany and spent the war years in exile. Some never returned to their homeland. Most served in the war and some were killed. At first some of them hoped a war would change society for the better but they were soon disillusioned when they saw the destruction and suffering that it caused. In the years after the war, many Expressionist artist revealed the horrors they experienced in their work.

    正确答案: 【参考译文】
    表现主义的影响不仅仅局限于美术界,其创作理念在戏剧、电影、文学以及建筑领域中都有所体现。表现主义画家的生平也有着许多共同之处,比如为了讨好父母,他们大都从学习应用工艺美术起步,如家居设计等。尽管他们后来也有了自己个性化的创作,但这些实用技巧仍会在他们的作品中有所体现。因为试图通过这种新的创作方式向传统而保守的社会观念发起挑战,在出现之初,便受到艺术评论家的公然嘲笑,引起了公众的极度愤慨。不过,随着时代的变迁,它逐渐为人们所接受,甚至成为年轻人崇拜的对象。
    第一次世界大战对表现主义画家影响很大。战争期间,他们有的逃离了德国,过着流亡的生活,有些从此就再也没能回去。他们中的大多数都参加了战争,有的在战斗中不幸牺牲。参战之初,他们对战争抱有幻想,期望它能使这个腐化的世界变得更美好,但是战争爆发后不久,这个幻想就破灭了。在亲眼目睹了无数的流血、牺牲、人们流离失所、痛苦挣扎的情景之后,这些画家的精神受到了极大的摧残,战后纷纷在作品中对当时所经历的恐惧和伤害进行了刻画。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    Thanks to the militant feminist movement of the()led by Mrs.Pankhurst before the First World War,votes were granted to women over 30 in 1918.
    A

    Luddites

    B

    Suffragettes

    C

    Chartists

    D

    Levellers


    正确答案: D
    解析: 暂无解析