首页
登录
职称英语
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26 which are based on Reading
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26 which are based on Reading
游客
2024-01-08
16
管理
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26 which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
CHILDREN’S LITERATURE
Stories and poems aimed at children have an exceedingly long history: lullabies, for example, were sung in Roman times, and a few nursery games and rhymes are almost as ancient. Yet so far as written-down literature is concerned, while there were stories in print before 1700 that children often seized on when they had the chance, such as translations of Aesop’s fables, fairy-stories and popular ballads and romances, these were not aimed at young people in particular. Since the only genuinely child-oriented literature at this time would have been a few instructional works to help with reading and general knowledge, plus the odd Puritanical tract as an aid to morality, the only course for keen child readers was to read adult literature. This still occurs today, especially with adult thrillers or romances that include more exciting, graphic detail than is normally found in the literature for younger readers.
By the middle of the 18th century there were enough eager child readers, and enough parents glad to cater to this interest, for publishers to specialize in children’s books whose first aim was pleasure rather than education or morality. In Britain, a London merchant named Thomas Boreham produced Cajanus, The Swedish Giant in 1742, while the more famous John Newbery published A Little Pretty Pocket Book in 1744. Its contents — rhymes, stories, children’s games plus a free gift(’A ball and a pincushion’)— in many ways anticipated the similar lucky-dip contents of children’s annuals this century. It is a tribute to Newbery’s flair that he hit upon a winning formula quite so quickly, to be pirated almost immediately in America.
Such pleasing levity was not to last. Influenced by Rousseau, whose Emile(1762)decreed that all books for children save Robinson Crusoe were a dangerous diversion, contemporary critics saw to it that children’s literature should be instructive and uplifting. Prominent among such voices was Mrs. Sarah Trimmer, whose magazine The Guardian of Education(1802)carried the first regular reviews of children’s books. It was she who condemned fairy-tales for their violence and general absurdity; her own stories, Fabulous Histories(1786)described talking animals who were always models of sense and decorum.
So the moral story for children was always threatened from within, given the way children have of drawing out entertainment from the sternest moralist. But the greatest blow to the improving children’s book was to come from an unlikely source indeed: early 19th-century interest in folklore. Both nursery rhymes, selected by James Orchard Halliwell for a folklore society in 1842, and collection of fairy-stories by the scholarly Grimm brothers, swiftly translated into English in 1823, soon rocket to popularity with the young, quickly leading to new editions, each one more child-centered than the last. From now on younger children could expect stories written for their particular interest and with the needs of their own limited experience of life kept well to the fore.
What eventually determined the reading of older children was often not the availability of special children’s literature as such but access to books that contained characters, such as young people or animals, with whom they could more easily empathize, or action, such as exploring or fighting, that made few demands on adult maturity or understanding.
The final apotheosis of literary childhood as something to be protected from unpleasant reality came with the arrival in the late 1930s of child-centered best-sellers intent on entertainment at its most escapist. In Britain novelist such as Enid Blyton and Richmal Crompton described children who were always free to have the most unlikely adventures, secure in the knowledge that nothing bad could ever happen to them in the end. The fact that war broke out again during her books’ greatest popularity fails to register at all in the self-enclosed world inhabited by Enid Blyton’s young characters. Reaction against such dream-worlds was inevitable after World War II, coinciding with the growth of paperback sales, children’s libraries and a new spirit of moral and social concern. Urged on by committed publishers and progressive librarians, writers slowly began to explore new areas of interest while also shifting the settings of their plots from the middle-class world to which their chiefly adult patrons had always previously belonged.
Critical emphasis, during this development, has been divided. For some the most important task was to rid children’s books of the social prejudice and exclusiveness no longer found acceptable. Others concentrated more on the positive achievements of contemporary children’s literature. That writers of these works are now often recommended to the attentions of adult as well as child readers echoes the 19th-century belief that children’s literature can be shared by the generations, rather than being a defensive barrier between childhood and the necessary growth towards adult understanding.
Questions 14-18
Complete the table below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from Reading Passage 2 for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
[*] [br]
选项
答案
adventures
解析
利用细节信息“late 1930s”定位于64页第三段第四行“…always free to have themost unlikely adventures,secure in the knowledge that nothing bad could ever happen tothem in the end”,原文信息“nothing bad could ever happen”对应题目“stories ofharm-free”,所以答案为adventures。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3344102.html
相关试题推荐
CompletethesummarybelowwithwordstakenfromReadingPassage2.Use
CompletethesummarybelowwithwordstakenfromReadingPassage2.Use
CompletethesummarybelowwithwordstakenfromReadingPassage2.Use
Lookatthefollowingstatements(Questions33-40)andthelistofpeoplein
Lookatthefollowingstatements(Questions33-40)andthelistofpeoplein
Lookatthefollowingstatements(Questions33-40)andthelistofpeoplein
READINGHavinganabundanceofstuffisasymptomof21stCenturymaterialis
READINGHavinganabundanceofstuffisasymptomof21stCenturymaterialis
READINGHavinganabundanceofstuffisasymptomof21stCenturymaterialis
READINGHavinganabundanceofstuffisasymptomof21stCenturymaterialis
随机试题
Theideathat,ifyourhouseisbuiltintherightposition,thismayaffect
1.试讲《过秦论》 2.内容: 及至始皇,奋六世之余烈,振长策而御宇内,吞二
输入血型不合的血液时,发生的并发症是A.细菌污染反应 B.溶血反应 C.发热
某项目分期开工建设,开发商二期工程3、4号楼仍然复制使用一期工程施工图纸。施工时
患者经抢救无效,宣布死亡,其最早出现的尸体现象是A.尸体腐烂 B.尸僵 C.
预应力瞬间损失包括( )。 A、锚固损失 B、孔道摩擦损失 C、弹性
1.简述企业文化在企业管理中的作用。
不道德行为是指打破了日常行为规范的行为。按照行为动机,可分为无意不道德行为和故意
近日在美国举行的一次有关味觉的科学会议上,人们对味觉的无知表现得淋漓尽致。会上给
下列哪项是肺炎球菌肺炎有特殊意义的症状A.突然寒战、稽留热 B.咳嗽、胸痛
最新回复
(
0
)