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
A) Have you ever fallen for a novel and been amazed not to find it on lists of great books? Or walked around a sculpture renowne
A) Have you ever fallen for a novel and been amazed not to find it on lists of great books? Or walked around a sculpture renowne
admin
2022-09-23
47
问题
A) Have you ever fallen for a novel and been amazed not to find it on lists of great books? Or walked around a sculpture renowned as a classic, struggling to see what the fuss is about? If so, you’ve probably pondered the question a psychologist, James Cutting, asked himself: how does a work of art come to be considered great?
B) The intuitive answer is that some works of art are just great: of intrinsically superior quality. The paintings that win prime spots in galleries, get taught in classes and reproduced in books are the ones that have proved their artistic value over time. If you can’t see they’re superior, that’s your problem. It’s an intimidatingly neat explanation. But some social scientists have been asking awkward questions of it, raising the possibility that artistic canons (名作目录) are little more than fossilised historical accidents.
C) Cutting, a professor at Cornell University, wondered if a psychological mechanism known as the " mere-exposure effect" played a role in deciding which paintings rise to the top of the cultural league. Cutting designed an experiment to test his hunch (直觉). Over a lecture course he regularly showed undergraduates works of impressionism for two seconds at a time. Some of the paintings were canonical, included in art-history books. Others were lesser known but of comparable quality. These were exposed four times as often. Afterwards, the students preferred them to the canonical works, while a control group of students liked the canonical ones best. Cutting’s students had grown to like those paintings more simply because they had seen them more.
D) Cutting believes his experiment offers a clue as to how canons are formed. He points out that the most reproduced works of impressionism today tend to have been bought by five or six wealthy and influential collectors in the late 19th century. The preferences of these men bestowed (给予) prestige on certain works, which made the works more likely to be hung in galleries and printed in collections. The fame passed down the years, gaining momentum from mere exposure as it did so. The more people were exposed to, the more they liked it, and the more they liked it, the more it appeared in books, on posters and in big exhibitions. Meanwhile, academics and critics created sophisticated justifications for its preeminence (卓越). After all, it’s not just the masses who tend to rate what they see more often more highly. As contemporary artists like Warhol and Damien Hirst have grasped, critics’ praise is deeply entwined (交织) with publicity. "Scholars", Cutting argues, "are no different from the public in the effects of mere exposure. "
E) The process described by Cutting evokes a principle that the sociologist Duncan Watts calls "cumulative advantage": once a thing becomes popular, it will tend to become more popular still. A few years ago, Watts, who is employed by Microsoft to study the dynamics of social networks, had a similar experience to Cutting’s in another Paris museum. After queuing to see the "Mona Lisa" in its climate-controlled bulletproof box at the Louvre, he came away puzzled: why was it considered so superior to the three other Leonardos in the previous chamber, to which nobody seemed to be paying the slightest attention?
F) When Watts looked into the history of "the greatest painting of all time", he discovered that, for most of its life, the "Mona Lisa" remained in relative obscurity. In the 1850s, Leonardo da Vinci was considered no match for giants of Renaissance art like Titian and Raphael, whose works were worth almost ten times as much as the "Mona Lisa". It was only in the 20th century that Leonardo’s portrait of his patron’s wife rocketed to the number-one spot. What propelled it there wasn’t a scholarly re-evaluation, but a theft.
G) In 1911 a maintenance worker at the Louvre walked out of the museum with the "Mona Lisa" hidden under his smock (工作服). Parisians were shocked at the theft of a painting to which, until then, they had paid little attention. When the museum reopened, people queued to see the gap where the " Mona Lisa" had once hung in a way they had never done for the painting itself. From then on, the "Mona Lisa" came to represent Western culture itself.
H) Although many have tried, it does seem improbable that the painting’s unique status can be attributed entirely to the quality of its brushstrokes. It has been said that the subject’s eyes follow the viewer around the room. But as the painting’s biographer, Donald Sassoon, dryly notes, "In reality the effect can be obtained from any portrait. " Duncan Watts proposes that the "Mona Lisa" is merely an extreme example of a general rule. Paintings, poems and pop songs are buoyed (使浮起) or sunk by random events or preferences that turn into waves of influence, passing down the generations.
I) "Saying that cultural objects have value, " Brian Eno once wrote, "is like saying that telephones have conversations. " Nearly all the cultural objects we consume arrive wrapped in inherited opinion; our preferences are always, to some extent, someone else’s. Visitors to the "Mona Lisa" know they are about to visit the greatest work of art ever and come away appropriately impressed—or let down. An audience at a performance of "Hamlet" know it is regarded as a work of genius, so that is what they mostly see. Watts even calls the preeminence of Shakespeare a "historical accident".
J) Although the rigid high-low distinction fell apart in the 1960s, we still use culture as a badge of identity. Today’s fashion for eclecticism (折中主义)—"I love Bach, Abba and Jay Z"—is, Shamus Khan, a Columbia University psychologist, argues, a new way for the middle class to distinguish themselves from what they perceive to be the narrow tastes of those beneath them in the social hierarchy.
K) The intrinsic quality of a work of art is starting to seem like its least important attribute. But perhaps it’s more significant than our social scientists allow. First of all, a work needs a certain quality to be eligible to be swept to the top of the pile. The "Mona Lisa" may not be a worthy world champion, but it was in the Louvre in the first place, and not by accident. Secondly, some stuff is simply better than other stuff. Read "Hamlet" after reading even the greatest of Shakespeare’s contemporaries, and the difference may strike you as unarguable.
L) A study in the British Journal of Aesthetics suggests that the exposure effect doesn’t work the same way on everything, and points to a different conclusion about how canons are formed. The social scientists are right to say that we should be a little sceptical of greatness, and that we should always look in the next room. Great art and mediocrity (平庸) can get confused, even by experts. But that’s why we need to see, and read, as much as we can. The more we’re exposed to the good and the bad, the better we are at telling the difference. The eclecticists have it.
Opinions about and preferences for cultural objects are often inheritable.
选项
答案
I
解析
由题干中的preferences和cultural objects定位到I段第二句。同义转述题。I段第二句提到,我们着迷的几乎所有文物都打着前人观点的烙印;在一定程度上,我们的喜好都是别人的喜好。题干中的inheritable对应原文中的inherited,故答案为I。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/C6R7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Therewillbelotsofjobopportunitiesinthesetwoareas.B、Therewillbelessjobopportunitiesinthesetwoareas.C、There
A、Itwillinspirepeopletokeepstriving.B、Itwillboostthesocialeconomy.C、Itwillexhaustanddisappointpeople.D、Itwil
A、Itwillinspirepeopletokeepstriving.B、Itwillboostthesocialeconomy.C、Itwillexhaustanddisappointpeople.D、Itwil
A、Schoolsuseprivatedetectionservices.B、Teachersdiscussessaytopicswiththeirstudents.C、Teachersaskstudentstoturni
A、HewasborninNewEngland.B、HeonceworkedforHarvardUniversity.C、HewasEdwardThomas’friend.D、Hewasn’tawardedanyp
A、Keeptheminfamily-baseddaycarecenters.B、Letthemstaywiththeirparentsorteachers.C、Askelderlyadultstoattendthe
A、Itprovidesafriendlyenvironmentforpracticingpublicspeaking.B、Itinvitespublicspeakingprofessorsandconsultantsto
A、Itismoreentertainingandenlightening.B、Itavoidshurtingothers’feelings.C、Itcanberememberedbetter.D、Itsavestime
A、Helpothersfornothinginreturn.B、Savemoneytohelpothers.C、Trytomakemoremoney.D、Gethelpfromtherichones.A
A、Becauseofthenationalfundingsystem.B、Becausetheycanwinfamemoreeasily.C、Becauseofthetenureandpromotionsystems
随机试题
急性肾盂肾炎抗感染的原则是
某男,36岁,患颈椎病,症见头晕,颈项僵硬,肩背酸痛,手臂麻木,证属风湿瘀阻所致的颈椎病,宜选用的成药是()。
下列关于各组药物为同一炮制方法的说法,正确的是
已知某建设项目报告期建筑安装工程费为1000万元,其中人工费150万元,材料费400万元,施工机具使用费200万元,管理费100万元,若上述四项费用的个体指数分别为105%、108%、110%和102%,则该建设项目建筑安装工程造价指数为()。
下列各项中,违背会计核算一贯性原则要求的有()。
政府预算的原则包括()。
甲公司为上市公司,2009—2011年,甲公司及其子公司发生的有关交易或事项如下:(1)因乙公司无法支付前欠甲公司货款3500万元,甲公司2009年6月8日与乙公司达成债务重组协议。协议约定,双方同意将该笔债权转换为对乙公司的投资,转换后,甲公司持有乙公
校对一份书稿,编辑甲每天的工作效率等于编辑乙、丙每天工作效率之和,丙的工作效率相当于甲、乙每天工作效率之和的1/5,三人一起校对只需6天就可完成。现在如果让乙单独校对这份书稿,则需要()天才能完成。
①建立一些新的交通网和新的管理制度,都是为了要把若干互相冲突的地区,重新放在一个系统之内②朝代刚兴盛的时候,新秩序产生,各个地区可以重新调节,彼此形成互补的关系③自古以来有一句话:分久必合,合久必分。朝代由盛转衰是一定的,开国时多是兴盛太平,结束时必是内忧
通过拨号远程配置Cisco路由器时,应使用的接口是()。
最新回复
(
0
)