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
(1)Since World War II the French have been variously surprised, dismayed, irritated and outraged by the power of American cultur
(1)Since World War II the French have been variously surprised, dismayed, irritated and outraged by the power of American cultur
admin
2019-05-24
25
问题
(1)Since World War II the French have been variously surprised, dismayed, irritated and outraged by the power of American culture and its effect on France and the world. Their only consolation has been the conviction that French culture is superior to anything that Walt Disney or Hollywood can offer.
(2)What France’s cultural elites have rarely done, however, is examine how both serious and pop culture actually work in the United States. Rather, in the view of Fr6deric Martel, a Frenchman and author of a recently released book on the topic, they have preferred to hide behind "a certain ideological anti-Americanism."
(3)Now Mr. Martel, 39, a former French cultural attache in Boston, has set out to change this. In Culture in America, a 622-page tome weighty with information, he challenges the conventional view here that(French)culture financed and organized by the government is entirely good and that(American)culture shaped by market forces is necessarily bad.
(4)"My first idea was to compare France and the United States," he recalled, "but when I arrived in America, I realized things were much more complicated. The United States is a continent, and you can’t compare a continent with a small country or a decentralized country with one that is highly centralized."
(5)As a result this book deals only with creativity and arts financing in the United States. But perhaps surprisingly, given the mixture of fear and disdain that American culture stirs among many French intellectuals, his approach is not polemical. He neither defends nor attacks the United States; he simply describes the American way of culture.
(6)"The idea is to see how a ’counter-model’ works," he explained over tea in a Paris hotel. "If the aim is to fight American cultural ’imperialism,’ we need to know it from the inside. If we want to modernize our own system, which needs new resources, it is useful to see how things can function without huge public investment."
(7)The news media’s response to Culture in America suggests there is room for debate. One weekly, L’-Express, said the book offered food for thought. Another, Le Nouvel Observateur, compared it favorably to Bernard-Henri LeVy’s recent overview, "American Vertigo: Traveling America in the Footsteps of Tocqueville," noting that Mr. Martel provides facts rather than impressions.
(8)Reviewing the book in Le Monde, Michel Guerrin and Emmanuel de Roux also said its strength lay in its emphasis on investigation over opinion. And another article in Le Monde took the American cultural statistics collected by Mr. Martel and compared them with similar figures for France. Its unexpected conclusion was that measured per capita the cultural infrastructures in the two countries were roughly similar.
(9)The first half of Culture in America—the title echoes Tocqueville’s own "Democracy in America"—is built around a question that puzzles some French: Why doesn’t the United States have a Culture Ministry?
(10)One traditional answer is that culture ministries threaten artistic freedom. Yet Mr. Martel demonstrates that Washington does in fact have a record of cultural activism: through the Works Progress Administration, with its theater, writers and art projects, under President Franklin D. Roosevelt; through the Kennedy White House’s embrace of artists; and in the creation of the National Endowment for the Arts in 1965.
(11)Mr. Martel then tracks the so-called culture wars, beginning with the cancellation of a Robert Mapplethorpe photography exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington in 1989 over concerns about its explicit content, which led to Congressional campaigning against the National Endowment for the Arts. Even today the endowment’s budget is far below mid-1980s levels and, at just under $125 million for 2006, is roughly what the French government gave the Paris National Opera this year.
(12)Still, what really intrigues Mr. Martel is how American culture flourishes despite the indifference or hostility of major government institutions.
(13)And that leads him to the crucial role played by nonprofit foundations, philanthropists, corporate sponsors, universities and community organizations, which in practice do receive indirect government support in the form of tax incentives.
(14)"If the Culture Ministry is nowhere to be found," he writes, "cultural life is everywhere."
(15)He felt reassured by this. He first visited the United States in 1999—to promote an earlier book, "The Pink and the Black: Homosexuals in France Since 1968"—and he was still very much a neophyte when he arrived in Boston in 2000. After studying the history of American culture in libraries and private archives, he set out to discover American culture as it is being lived today.
(16)"I spent all my vacations traveling," he said. "I counted up over 700 interviews in 110 cities in 35 states. American universities were a revelation: French universities don’t play an important cultural role. I reached out to gays, feminists, Latinos, avant-garde, counterculture. I gave priority to visiting black communities in every major city, attending associations, street theater, poetry clubs."
(17)Yet, Mr. Martel noted, the same country that embraces this extraordinary cultural diversity is itself accused of imposing cultural uniformity on the world. The United States was almost alone last year in voting against a French-sponsored international convention on cultural diversity that was adopted overwhelmingly by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, which is based in Paris. This apparent contradiction had a simple explanation at Unesco: Washington was bending to pressure from Hollywood studios, which claimed that the convention threatened their movie and television exports. But Mr. Martel also sees inconsistencies—actually, he prefers the word hypocrisy—in the French position. "Americans defend cultural diversity at home and deny it abroad," he said, "while France defends cultural diversity around the world and refuses it at home."
(18)And it is here that he most wants France to learn from the United States. "What really annoys me is the way our cultural elite uses ideology to protect its privileges," he said. "It says that our culture defines a certain idea of France, that the alternative is Americanization. But it’s really only defending itself against the popular classes. We cannot have 10 percent of our population stemming from immigration and deny them their culture." To promote grass-roots culture, then, he wants decision making to be deconcentrated. "The government will still finance the arts, but we don’t need a minister defining culture," he said. "We need thousands of people defining culture. Power should flow bottom-up, not top-down. That’s the debate I want to provoke in the new year." He seemed to be looking forward to a fight. "That’s why my book is about France," he said, "while being about America."
The critics of the book Culture in America _____.
选项
A、rave about it
B、are strongly critical of it
C、point out its advantages
D、discuss its weakness
答案
C
解析
第7段末句中的compared it favorably to和第8段首句中的strength(优点)表明评论家指出了该书的优点,C符合题意。A、C表褒义,B、D表贬义,文中无批评该书的字眼,故可排除B、D;而文中评论家只是指出该书的优点,并未极力赞美(rave about)它,故A也不对。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/EKEK777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
EuropeanimmigrantstoColonialAmericabroughtwiththemtheirculture,traditionsandphilosophyabouteducation.Manyof【S1】_
Educationgivesustheknowledgeoftheworldaroundus.Itdevelopswithusaperspectiveoflookingatlife.Ithelpsusbuild
Thenewborncanseethedifferencebetweenvariousshapesandpatternsfrombirth.Hepreferspatternsfordullorbrightsolid
Today’scollegestudentsaremorenarcissisticandself-centeredthantheirpredecessors,accordingtoacomprehensivenewstud
Peopleineveryworkplacetalkaboutorganizationalculture,themysteriouswordthatcharacterizesaworkenvironment.Oneof
Peopleineveryworkplacetalkaboutorganizationalculture,themysteriouswordthatcharacterizesaworkenvironment.Oneof
Humansarethoughttoberesponsibleforalargenumberofenvironmentalproblems,rangingfromglobalwarmingtoozonedepleti
PASSAGETWOWhatarethecharacteristicsoftoday’sbusiness-schoolgraduates?
Themoneytheyinvestfortrainingalsomorehighlyconcentratedonprofessionalandmanagerialemployees.
随机试题
下列哪一项不是黄疸发生的原因
进口食品必须符合国家卫生标准和卫生管理办法的规定,国内市场上的进口食品由谁进行监督
女,15岁,凸面型,鼻唇角小,面下1/3长,磨牙中性关系,尖牙远中关系,前牙Ⅲ度深覆,覆盖6mm,上颌前牙段拥挤4mm,下颌前牙段拥挤6mm,ANB5.5°。目前下列哪项指标对确定治疗方案最重要
男性,30岁,患十二指肠溃疡4年,突发上腹剧痛5小时,继而全腹痛、大汗。查体:全腹压痛,反跳痛。考虑有溃疡病穿孔的可能如为胃溃疡穿孔,在哪一部位多见
到2010年,沿海港口分层次布局进一步完善,()集装箱等运输体系大型专业化码头布局基本形成。
根据《水利水电工程施工通用安全技术规程》SL398—2007,施工设施的设置应符合()及职业卫生等要求。
会计人员看人办事:“官大办得快,官小办得慢,无官拖着办”。这一现象违反了()的会计职业道德规范的要求。
用“世界上规模最大的宫殿建筑群”来形容北京故宫的宏伟,而不是面面俱到地去描述,这种导游讲解技巧是()。
齐文化遗存主要集中在()跗近。
下列关于单一制国家结构形式的说法,正确的有()。
最新回复
(
0
)