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
2016-08-19
80
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,莱文沃思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];倒数第三段前三句提到,如今各地举办艺术节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/LP7O777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Southernliterature(sometimescalledtheliteratureoftheAmericanSouth)isdefinedasAmericanliteratureabouttheSouthernU
HerbertGeorgeWellsistheauthorof______,oneofthefirstsciencefictions.
AndrewCarnegie,knownastheKingofSteel,builtthesteelindustryintheUnitedStates,and,intheprocess,becameoneof
WhichofthefollowingcountriesisNOTaformercolonyofEngland?
Whichofthefollowingcountriesisunicameralinitsparliamentarysystem?
Inlessthanthreedecades"multiculturalism"hasbecomeawordimmediatelyrecognizablebypolicy【M1】______makers,socialcri
InBritain,thedurationofaparliamentisusually______years.
SuggestopediaI.IntroductionA.BasedonhowthebrainworksandhowwelearnmosteffectivelyB.Derivedfromsuggestionand
DouglasAdams,thelatelamentedauthorofTheHitchhiker’sGuidetotheGalaxy,dreamedupmanycomiccreations.Oneofhisgre
不是每个人都能把自己的工作做好。
随机试题
男,2个月,患先心病,气促2天,伴轻咳嗽,无发热。查体:呼吸65次/分,无发绀,两肺闻及细湿啰音,心率170次/分,心音低钝,胸骨左缘2~3肋间闻及Ⅳ级收缩期杂音,伴有震颤,肝脏肋下4cm,剑突下4cm,X线胸片示心胸比率0.60,左心室增大,肺纹理增多,
设(1)求出A-I,问A-I是否可逆,若可逆,求出(A-I)-1.(2)若矩阵X满足XA=A+X,求矩阵X.
下列中医治法中哪项不适用于膈下肠间、盆腔脓肿的治疗
(2011年案例分析第71一75题)杭州甲化工厂与南京乙化工公司在苏州签订了一份化工原料买卖合同,双方约定由杭州甲化工厂用灌装车向南京乙化工公司发运化工原料共50吨,货到付款。没有约定合同争议管辖地。南京乙化工公司又将其中的30吨转让给武汉丙化学品公司,而
行政监察
某饱和土样的天然含水率w=20%,土粒比重ds=2.75,该土样的孔隙比为()。[2011年真题]
企业接受捐赠的资产应纳人( )核算。
甲公司2×15年发生的部分经济业务如下:(1)3月15日,甲公司与乙公司签订代销协议,协议约定甲公司委托乙公司销售一批成本价为500万元的产品,甲公司与乙公司结算价格为700万元,并按结算价格的10%向乙公司支付代销手续费。当日甲公司将产品发给乙公司。
邓小平说:“一个党,一个国家,一个民族,如果一切从本本出发,思想僵化,迷信盛行,那它就不能前进,它的生机也要停止了,就要亡党亡国。”从本本出发的教条主义违背了()。
Whathappenstowivesandhusbands?
最新回复
(
0
)