For a man who wants the world to slow down, Carl Honore’s moment of clarity came in, of all places, an airport. The Canadian jou

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问题     For a man who wants the world to slow down, Carl Honore’s moment of clarity came in, of all places, an airport. The Canadian journalist was leafing through a newspaper at Rome’s Fiumicino airport when he spotted an ad for a collection of condensed, one-minute bedtime stories for kids. At first Honore, a self-described"speedaholic", was delighted at the idea of a more efficient bedtime experience for his 2-year-old son. Then he was horrified. "Have I gone completely insane?" he asked himself, and realized the answer was"Probably. "Out of that epiphany came a best-selling book and a whole new career for Honore as an international spokesman for the concept of leisure. "I’m attacking the whole cultural assumption that faster is better and we must cram every waking hour with things to do,"says Honore, who now lives in London. In a world of bottom-line bosses and results-oriented parents, he dares speak up in favor of the unabridged fairy tale.
    It’s a message people seem to want to hear. Since it appeared in April, In Praise of Slowness has been translated into 12 languages and sold some 60,000 copies, landing on best-seller lists in four countries; a British production company has bought television rights. Honore celebrates, perhaps a bit prematurely, a worldwide disillusionment with "the cult of speed". As evidence he cites the Slow Food rebellion against McDonald’s that began in Italy and has spread its gospel of civilized dining and local products even to the unlikely precincts of New York and Chicago. In a world in which some parents send their offspring to prep courses for preschool, a growing number of schools around the world—about 800—are following the advice of the early 20th-century German educator Rudolf Steiner to encourage children to play and doodle to their hearts’ content, putting off learning to read until as late as 7. In his own life, Honore has substituted meditation for tennis and for television-, he has taken off his wristwatch, which means he’s less worried about getting somewhere on time and can drive there without speeding.
    Oddly, though, Honore’s book has yet to catch on in the country that arguably needs it most, the one that gave the world the assembly line and the one-minute manager. Chained to cell phones and BlackBerrys, fueled by junk food and forced to work ever longer hours as their employers cut jobs, frazzled American workers suffer from what the Seattle-based independent television producer John de Graaf called"affluenza"in his 2001 book of the same name. It is the collective malaise of a materialistic society that equates the good life with"the goods life."
    By contrast, Europeans and even the famously efficient Japanese are more receptive. Slow Food held its second biennial gastronomic fair in Turin last month, drawing tens of thousands of visitors, including Prince Charles, who took a couple of hours out of a European tour to savor a pint of award-winning pale English ale. The Slow Cities movement has won the backing of municipal officials in more than 100 towns and cities in Europe, Japan and Brazil with a lengthy manifesto urging policies to reduce noise and traffic, preserve the local esthetic and gastronomic customs and establish more pedestrian zones and green spaces. The Society for the Deceleration of Time held its 14th annual meeting in Austria last month to promote what its organizers call" a more conscious way of living. "Mastering relaxation isn’t something to attempt on your own, according to society member Christian Lackner. "When everyone is telling you to go faster, as an individual you do it," says Lackner. "You need a movement, a way of building a group of people who want to resist in order to make it easier to say,’ No, I won’t’. "
    Perhaps Americans need to be reassured that the slowness movement is not about fleeing to a cottage in rural Vermont. It’s an effort to strike the right balance between work and leisure. A few enlightened companies like the accounting firm Ernst & Young are urging employees not to check their office e-mail and phone messages on weekends. Just as the election campaign reached a fever pitch in late October, leisure-minded Americans in 10 states were holding seminars on the perils of overwork and giving each other 15-minute massages on the second annual Take Back Your Time Day. The date was picked because the nine weeks that remained until the end of the year equal the amount of time the average American works in excess of his counterparts in Western Europe. For that matter, if you believe the message on their T shirts, the average American works longer than the average medieval peasant.
    But the premium on long hours and productivity continues to dominate the American workplace. Take Back Your Time has issued a six-point agenda for legislative action that would require employers to provide a minimum of three weeks’ annual paid vacation and one week of paid sick leave. But—in contrast to the widespread support these efforts have in European countries—only Sen. Edward Kennedy’s office has expressed interest in the proposals. For the foreseeable future Americans are pretty much on their own in the revolt against the cult of speed.
The word " epiphany" in the first paragraph most likely means______.

选项 A、fantasy
B、insight
C、incident
D、perplexity

答案B

解析 语义题。本文开篇指出卡尔·奥诺雷在机场看到一则征集浓缩为一分钟的儿童床头故事的广告,起初,想到他两岁的儿子将能更有效率地听故事.他感到很高兴。但随后;他被这种想法吓坏了。接着指出,正是那一时刻的“epiphany”,让奥诺雷写出一本畅销书,开始了作为休闲概念国际代言人的全新生涯。结合首句和后面的解释可以看出,正是那一时刻的顿悟,彻底改变了卡尔的职业生涯,故[B]为答案。
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