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
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Storytelling, From Prehistoric
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Storytelling, From Prehistoric
admin
2018-09-11
49
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
Storytelling, From Prehistoric Caves To Modern Cinemas
A It was told, we suppose, to people crouched around a fire: a tale of adventure, most likely—relating some close encounter with death; a remarkable hunt, an escape from mortal danger; a vision, or something else out of the ordinary. Whatever its thread, the weaving of this story was done with a prime purpose. The listeners must be kept listening. They must not fall asleep. So, as the story went on, its audience should be sustained by one question above all. What happens next?
B The first fireside stories in human history can never be known. They were kept in the heads of those who told them. This method of storage is not necessarily inefficient. From documented oral traditions in Australia, the Balkans and other parts of the world we know that specialised storytellers and poets can recite from memory literally thousands of lines, in verse or prose, verbatim—word for word. But while memory is rightly considered an art in itself, it is clear that a primary purpose of making symbols is to have a system of reminders or mnemonic cues—signs that assist us to recall certain information in the mind’s eye.
C In some Polynesian communities a notched memory stick may help to guide a storyteller through successive stages of recitation. But in other parts of the world, the activity of storytelling historically resulted in the development or even the invention of writing systems. One theory about the arrival of literacy in ancient Greece, for example, argues that the epic tales about the Trojan War and the wanderings of Odysseus—traditionally attributed to Homer—were just so enchanting to hear that they had to be preserved. So the Greeks, c. 750-700BC, borrowed an alphabet from their neighbors in the eastern Mediterranean, the Phoenicians.
D The custom of recording stories on parchment and other materials can be traced in many manifestations around the world, from the priestly papyrus archives of ancient Egypt to the birch-bark scrolls on which the North American Ojibway Indians set down their creation-myth. It is a well-tried and universal practice: so much so that to this day storytime is probably most often associated with words on paper. The formal practice of narrating a story aloud would seem—so we assume—to have given way to newspapers, novels and comic strips. This, however, is not the case. Statistically it is doubtful that the majority of humans currently rely upon the written word to get access to stories. So what is the alternative source?
E Each year, over 7 billion people will go to watch the latest offering from Hollywood, Bollywood and beyond. The supreme storyteller of today is cinema. The movies, as distinct from still photography, seem to be an essentially modem phenomenon. This is an illusion, for there are, as we shall see, certain ways in which the medium of film is indebted to very old precedents of arranging ’sequences’ of images. But any account of visual storytelling must begin with the recognition that all storytelling beats with a deeply atavistic pulse: that is, a ’good story’ relies upon formal patterns of plot and characterisation that have been embedded in the practice of storytelling over many generations.
F Thousands of scripts arrive every week at the offices of the major film studios. But aspiring screenwriters really need look no further for essential advice than the fourth-century BC Greek Philosopher Aristotle. He left some incomplete lecture notes on the art of telling stories in various literary and dramatic modes, a slim, volume known as The Poetics. Though he can never have envisaged the popcorn-fuelled actuality of a multiplex cinema, Aristotle is almost prescient about the key elements required to get the crowds flocking to such a cultural hub. He analyzed the process with cool rationalism. When a story enchants us, we lose the sense of where we are; we are drawn into the story so thoroughly that we forget it is a story being told. This is, in Aristotle’s phrase, ’the suspension of disbelief.
G We know the feeling. If ever we have stayed in our seats, stunned with grief, as the credits roll by, or for days after seeing that vivid evocation of horror have been nervous about taking a shower at home, then we have suspended disbelief. We have been caught, or captivated, in the storyteller’s web. Did it all really happen? We really thought so—for a while. Aristotle must have witnessed often enough this suspension of disbelief. He taught at Athens, the city where theater developed as a primary form of civic ritual and recreation. Two theatrical types of storytelling, tragedy and comedy, caused Athenian audiences to lose themselves in sadness and laughter respectively. Tragedy, for Aristotle, was particularly potent in its capacity to enlist and then purge the emotions of those watching the story unfold on the stage, so he tried to identify those factors in the storyteller’s art that brought about such engagement. He had, as an obvious sample for analysis, not only the fifth-century BC masterpieces of Classical Greek tragedy written by Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides. Beyond them stood Homer, whose stories even then had canonical status: The Iliad and The Odyssey were already considered literary landmarks—stories by which all other stories should be measured. So what was the secret of Homer’s narrative art?
H It was not hard to find. Homer created credible heroes. His heroes belonged to the past, they were mighty and magnificent, yet they were not, in the end, fantasy figures. He made his heroes sulk, bicker, cheat and cry. They were, in short, characters—protagonists of a story that an audience would care about, would want to follow, would want to know what happens next. As Aristotle saw, the hero who shows a human side—some flaw or weakness to which mortals are prone—is intrinsically dramatic.
Questions 14-18
Reading Passage 2 has eight paragraphs, A-H.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
A description of reciting stories without any assistance
选项
答案
B
解析
该信息出现在段落B“(stories)weTe kept in the heads of those who told them”,后面还提及“…specialised storytellers and poets can recite from memory literally thousands oflines,in verse or prose…”,对应题目所说的“reciting stories without any assistance”。所以正确答案为B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/iONO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
Directions:Eachofthefollowingreadingcomprehensionquestionsisbasedonthecontentofthefollowingpassage.Readthepas
Hispenchantforlearninghistoryshouldprovetobe______duringhisstudiestobecomeahistoryteacher.
Althoughanumberofinventionsnotonlychangesocietybutalsobringtheinventorenormousprideandevenpaychecks,somefizz
WhetherthelanguagesoftheancientAmericanpeopleswereusedforexpressingabstractuniversalconceptscanbeclearlyanswer
Thispassageisadaptedfrommaterialpublishedin2001.FrederickDouglasswasunquestionablythemostfamousAfricanAmerican
By(i)______manyaspectsofnaturalriverecosystems,somedamscauseseriousharm,producing(ii)______effectsonwater,land,
Cryogenicenergystoragehastheadvantageofbeingsuitableinany(i)____,regardlessofgeographyorgeology,factorsthatma
GiventheevidenceofEgyptianandBabylonian____laterGreekcivilization,itwouldbeincorrecttoviewtheworkofGreeksci
随机试题
“副语言沟通”指的是()。
Windows7操作系统属于()
颅内压超过200mmH2O称为颅内压增高。
收缩压的高低主要反映( )的多少舒张压的高低主要反映( )的大小
下列哪项是临床确定患者存在急性心肌损害最有价值的指标
某外资企业生产的特定药品存在安全风险,国家食品药品监督管理总局决定约谈该外资企业,请该企业核实有关情况务必与国外同步进行召回,此后,国家食品药品监督管理总局收到该外资企业报告,该外资企业决定主动对全球各个市场特定批次该药物制剂进行二级召回。上述信息中的
甲税务局对某公司作出税收强制执行决定,此决定的执行对该公司可能产生重大不利影响,甲税务局依照《行政复议法实施条例》及《税务行政复议规则》的要求,依法告知其享有申请税务行政复议的权利、税务行政复议机关和申请期限,甲税务局的这一做法.体现了行政程序法中的(
型式试验的内容包括()。
苗苗认为,班级管理制度应该符合全班所有的学生,如果不符合就应该修改。根据科尔伯格的理论,苗苗处于道德发展的哪一个阶段?()
2017年7月8日,在第四届世界遗产大会上,中国福建的()获准列入世界文化遗产名录。至此,中国已拥有52处世界遗产。
最新回复
(
0
)