首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
High in the mountains of southern France, the sleepy town of Aurillac has few obvious charms to attract the outsider. If the set
High in the mountains of southern France, the sleepy town of Aurillac has few obvious charms to attract the outsider. If the set
admin
2015-10-21
53
问题
High in the mountains of southern France, the sleepy town of Aurillac has few obvious charms to attract the outsider. If the setting is scenic, its claims to fame are slender: a thriving umbrella industry and a reputation as the coldest place in the country. Understandably, the tourists stay away. Except, that is, for one hectic week each summer, when the community plays host to the International Festival of Street Theater, an extravaganza that now attracts 100,000 visitors keen to watch performers from as far away as Poland and Chile. The bars fill; the shops prosper. "It’s put Aurillac on the map," says festival director Jean-Marie Songy. "We’re a place that people visit as opposed to simply passing by. "
And as countless festival organizers and chambers of commerce have realized, the longer visitors stay, the more they spend. As the summer season draws to a close, communities across the world—from outsize cities to modest villages—are counting the rewards of tapping into this booming cultural economy. This year Europe alone will stage some 400 arts festivals, ranging from the Reykjavik Jazz Festival to the Edinburgh International Festival of music, opera and theater, which last month celebrated its 60th anniversary.
All the world loves a party, it seems—especially one that pays its own way. "More and more places are recognizing the massive economic, cultural and social benefits of a festival," says Joanna Baker, the Edinburgh festival’s marketing director. To be sure, a successful arts festival represents a happy union of commercial self-interest and public entertainment. Though many of even the best-known festivals need public subsidies to survive, they still provide an opportunity to lift a community’s profile or pack its restaurants and hotels.
Festivalgoers face an increasingly eclectic array of subjects—and venues. Barcelona, for one, boasts 26 major arts festivals a year—only one more than Melbourne, Australia. Film buffs can now choose between showings in cities from Aarhus in Denmark to Zagreb, not to mention the Pan-African Festival of Film and Television in Burkina Faso.
Ambitious promoters are now looking across borders to push successful formulas. In recent years, the Hay-on-Wye literary festival in Britain has established similar events in Segovia, Spain, and the Colombian city of Cartagena. Even newcomers to the market have little problem filling seats; Manchester reports packed houses and reckons it’s on target to attract 300,000 visitors within a few years.
To the optimists, those surging numbers suggest a welcome change in public tastes. The new British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has spoken of the proliferating literary festivals—Britain now has more than 300, compared with just three back in 1983—as evidence of a new cultural "seriousness." Others believe the communal experience of festivalgoing provides a useful antidote to the solitary pastimes—many of them electronic—of 21st-century life.
But festival frenzy can be too much of a good thing. A report published last year for the Edinburgh International Festival warned that the rising tally of festivals would rapidly increase the competition for audiences. The workaday port of Rotterdam is now home to a year-round series of festivals in part to keep up with its classier neighbor, Amsterdam In an age of cheap air travel, the opera lover with a free weekend can head for Riga as easily as Salzburg.
And there’s a finite supply of sponsors and public money, not to mention performers. Already there’s grumbling over rising fees for the biggest names.
Critics argue that the whole purpose of the festival is changing. "Festivals used to belong to the public," says Getz. "Now they are almost always created for strategic reasons. " Inevitably, that brings the risk of losing distinctive appeal. "This ’ festivalization’ is creating a kind of homogeneity problem that festivals were created to solve," said Janice Price, boss of Luminato, Toronto’s Festival of Arts and Creativity.
Still, the benefits are simply too good to pass up. Cultural festivals are emerging as the new must-have for postindustrial cities keen to recast their images. Redeveloping the rundown waterfront or calling in big-name architects is only the start. "Big, flashy iconic buildings are not enough," says Fran Thorns, head of Cultural Strategy at Manchester City Council in Britain. "You need to fill the space between the buildings—and that’s where festivals come in. "
If all else fails, cities can follow the example of little Leavenworth, Washington, and completely recreate themselves as a festival center. When Leavenworth’s logging industry collapsed, the settlement was remodeled to resemble a Bavarian village capable of hosting a range of cultural events. Result: 2 and a half million visitors a year. And a reputation as a don’t-miss stop on the festival circuit.
Which of the following statements is INCORRECT according to the passage?
选项
A、Cultural festivals help to rebuild the economy in Leavenworth, Washington.
B、Authorities are considering setting a limit on the number of arts festivals.
C、Some successful festivals have become prototypes for others to emulate.
D、The economic and social benefits are altering the purpose of festivals.
答案
B
解析
细节题。文章末段提到,在伐木业出现衰落后Leavenworth市通过转型为文化艺术节胜地而获得了巨大的收益,故排除[A];第五段前两句提到,雄心勃勃的组织者们正在把举办艺术节的成功模式推广到其他国家,故排除[C];倒数第三段提到,如今各地举办艺术节的目的往往出于战略性原因,故排除[D];文中虽然谈到艺术节热的诸多弊端,但并未提及权威机构将会采取限制措施,[B]属于过度推断,故为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/7UKO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Thoughratheryoungincomparisonwithsomeothers,______isthebiggestuniversityinEngland.
Decisionscanbemadequickly,ortheycanbemadeaftercarefulthought.Doyouagreeordisagreewiththefollowingstatement?
TensofthousandsofpeoplehavedemonstratedacrossGermanytodemanda【N1】______totheuseof【N2】______.Anti-nuclearactivist
BeforeSarkozy’splanswerecarriedout,theminimumretirementageinFrancewas
Thebrainsofchildrenareaffectedbyfamilyviolenceinthesamewayascombataffectssoldiers,accordingtoastudy.Inbot
HowtoPresentaSeminarPaperUniversitystudentsoftenattendmanyseminarsforvarioussubjects,thereforeitisusefulf
Insixteenth-centuryItalyandeighteenth-centuryFrance,waningprosperityandincreasingsocialunrestledtherulingfamilies
Manytypically"American"characteristicsarearesultofvalue.【M1】______ThereisaremarkableethicdiversityintheUS.Amo
Manytypically"American"characteristicsarearesultofvalue.【M1】______ThereisaremarkableethicdiversityintheUS.Amo
Languagepervadessociallife.Itistheprincipalvehicleforthetransmissionofculturalknowledge,andtheprimarymeansby
随机试题
平时维持交感缩血管纤维紧张性活动的基本中中枢位于
药物流产的禁忌证是
关于营业税的纳税地点,下列说法正确的有()。
一般会计账簿的打印时间由单位根据需要决定,至少每年打印一次。
2×16年12月31日,甲公司与乙公司签订租赁协议,甲公司将一栋办公楼出租给乙公司,租赁期开始日为2×17年1月1日,年租金为180万元,租赁期为10年。乙公司将租入的资产作为办公楼使用。甲公司将该栋办公楼作为投资性房地产核算,采用公允价值模式进行后续计量
可靠性设计中的可靠分配是由上到下的分解过程,常用的方法有()。
战争文化研究运用了多种学科、多种理论和多种研究方法来解释战争与社会文化之间的互动关系,远比运用单一学科解释要_______得多,可以修正过去一些错误或存在_______的观点,也可以对历史进行另外一种角度的解释或观察。填入画横线部分最恰当的一项是:
一份最近的研究报告表明,尽管只有3%在京石高速公路上驾驶的司机为其汽车装备了雷达探测器,但是在因超速而被罚的所有汽车中,却有33%以上的汽车装备了雷达探测器。显然,车上装备雷达探测器的司机比没有装备雷达探测器的司机更有可能经常超速。以下哪项最可能是上述论证
根据法律的规范作用的指向和侧重,可以将公共生活中法律规范的作用分为指引作用、预测作用、评价作用、强制作用和教育作用。最首要的作用是()
BeforeRebeccaclimbedEverest,sheworkedasa______.AfterhertriptoAsia,Rebecca______.
最新回复
(
0
)