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
Growing Up Colored A)You wouldn’t know Piedmont anymore-my Piedmont, I mean-the town in West Virginia where I learned to be a co
Growing Up Colored A)You wouldn’t know Piedmont anymore-my Piedmont, I mean-the town in West Virginia where I learned to be a co
admin
2019-03-15
77
问题
Growing Up Colored
A)You wouldn’t know Piedmont anymore-my Piedmont, I mean-the town in West Virginia where I learned to be a colored boy.
B)The 1950s in Piedmont was a time to remember, or at least to me. People were always proud to be from Piedmont—lying at the foot of a mountain, on the banks of the mighty Potomac. We knew God gave America no more beautiful location. I never knew colored people anywhere who were crazier about mountains and water, flowers and trees, fishing and hunting. For as long as anyone could remember, we could outhunt, outshoot, and outswim the white boys in the valley.
C)The social structure of Piedmont was something we knew like the back of our hands. It was an immigrant town; white Piedmont was Italian and Irish, with a handful of wealthy WASPs (盎格鲁撒克逊裔的白人新教徒)on East Hampshire Street, and "ethnic" neighborhoods of working-class people everywhere else, colored and white.
D)For as long as anyone can remember, Piedmont’s character has been completely bound up with the Westvaco paper mill: its prosperous past and doubtful future. At first glance, the town is a typical dying mill center. Many once beautiful buildings stand empty, evidencing a bygone time of spirit and pride. The big houses on East Hampshire Street are no longer proud, as they were when I was a kid.
E)Like the Italians and the Irish, most of the colored people migrated to Piedmont at the turn of the 20th century to work at the paper mill, which opened in 1888. All the colored men at the paper mill worked on "the platform"—loading paper into trucks until the craft unions were finally integrated in 1968. Loading is what Daddy did every working day of his life. That’s what almost every colored grown-up I knew did.
F)Colored people lived in three neighborhoods that were clearly separated. Welcome to the Colored Zone, a large stretched banner could have said. And it felt good in there, like walking around your house in bare feet and underwear, or snoring (打鼾)right out loud on the couch in front of the TV—enveloped by the comforts of home, the warmth of those you love.
G)Of course, the colored world was not so much a neighborhood as a condition of existence. And though our own world was seemingly self-contained, it impacted on the white world of Piedmont in almost every direction. Certainly, the borders of our world seemed to be impacted on when some white man or woman showed up where he or she did not belong, such as at the black Legion Hall. Our space was violated when one of them showed up at a dance or a party. The rhythms would be off. The music would sound not quite right. Everybody would leave early.
H)Before 1955, most white people were just shadowy presences in our world, vague figures of power like remote bosses at the mill or clerks at the bank. There were exceptions, of course, the white people who would come into our world in routine, everyday ways we all understood. Mr. Mail Man, Mr.Insurance Man, Mr. White-and-Chocolate Milk Man, Mr. Landlord Man, Mr. Police Man: we called white people by their trade, like characters in a mystery play. Mr. Insurance Man would come by every other week to collect payments on college or death policies, sometimes 50 cents or less.
I)"It’s no disgrace to be colored," the black entertainer Bert Williams famously observed early in the century, " but it is awfully inconvenient. " For most of my childhood, we couldn’t eat in restaurants or sleep in hotels, we couldn’t use certain bathrooms or try on clothes in stores. Mama insisted that we dress up when we went to shop. She was carefully dressed when she went to clothing stores, and wore white pads called shields under her arms so her dress or blouse would show no sweat. " We’d like to try this on," she’d say carefully, uttering her words precisely and properly. " We don’t buy clothes we can’t try on," she’d say when they declined, and we’d walk out in Mama’s dignified (有尊严的)manner. She preferred to shop where we had an account and where everyone knew who she was.
J)At the Cut-Rate Drug Store, no one colored was allowed to sit down at the counter or tables, with one exception: my father. I don’t know for certain why Carl Dadisman, the owner, wouldn’t stop Daddy from sitting down. But I believe it was in part because Daddy was so light-colored, and in part because, during his shift at the phone company, he picked up orders for food and coffee for the operators. Colored people were supposed to stand at the counter, get their food to go, and leave. Even when Young Doc Bess would set up the basketball team with free Cokes after one of many victories, the colored players had to stand around and drink out of paper cups while the white players and cheerleaders sat down in comfortable chairs and drank out of glasses.
K)I couldn’t have been much older than five or six as I sat with my father at the Cut-Rate one afternoon, enjoying ice cream.Mr.Wilson, a stony-faced Irishman, walked by." Hello, Mr. Wilson," my father said. "Hello, George. "
L)I was genuinely puzzled. Mr. Wilson must have confused my father with somebody else, but who? There weren’t any Georges among the colored people in Piedmont. " Why don’t you tell him your name, Daddy?" I asked loudly."Your name isn’t George. "
"He knows my name, boy," my father said after a long pause."He calls all colored people George. M)I knew we wouldn’t talk about it again; even at that age, I was given to understand that there were some subjects it didn’t do to worry to death about. Now that I have children, I realize that what distressed my father wasn’t so much the Mr. Wilsons of the world as the painful obligation to explain the racial facts of life to someone who hadn’t quite learned them yet. Maybe Mr. Wilson couldn’t hurt my father by calling him George; but I hurt him by asking to know why.
The author later realized he had caused great distress to his father by asking why he was wrongly addressed.
选项
答案
M
解析
文章K段提到父亲与威尔逊先生打招呼时,威尔逊叫父亲乔治这件事,L段说明了作者对这件事的困惑并询问父亲,M段则给出了作者的领悟:让我父亲伤心(distressed的并不是这个世界上像威尔逊先生那样的人,而是如何必须向一个不懂事的孩子解释种族歧视这个事实或许威尔逊先生叫我父亲乔治并没有伤害到他但是我的问题着实让他受伤题干是对该划线部分的总结,故答案为M。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/WzZ7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Men.B、Women.C、Olderpeople.D、Youngerpeople.C细节辨认题。短文最后一句Otherstudiesshowthatolderpeopleusuallyfinditeasiertore
A、Checkyournumberandcallagain.B、Telltheoperatorwhathashappened.C、Asktheoperatortoputyouthrough.D、Asktheoper
CreativeBookReportIdeasA)Areyouatalossforcreativebookreportideasforyourstudents?Ifyes,thenthisarticlewill
A、Studentsaregoingtotakethefinalexamtoday.B、It’sthelastdayStevecandroptheclasswithafullrefund.C、Students
A、TocontrolKidalairport.B、Toprotectthetown.C、ToprotectthecapitalBamako.D、TofightagainstIslamistmilitants.B细节推断
A、Afraid.B、Excited.C、Curious.D、Indifferent.A短文说,最初,人类和其他动物一样很可能也怕火。A正确。Atfirst引导的语义强调之处出题,四个选项都为表示心理活动的形容词,听到什么选什么。
Istechnologychangingourbrains?Anewstudyaddstoagrowingbodyofresearchthatsaysitis.Accordingtothestudy,a【C1】
A、Peoplewhoeatspoiledfoodmaygetsick.B、Farmershavetothrowawayspoiledproducts.C、Farmershavetosellthespoiledpr
A、Itisaninternationalorganization.B、Itonlyexistsinpoorcountries.C、Peoplealwaysthinkhighlyofit.D、Anyonecanjoin
HavingKidsMakesYouHappy?[A]WhenIwasgrowingup,ourformerneighbors,whomwe’llcalltheSloans,weretheonlycoupleo
随机试题
分析纯试剂瓶签的颜色为()。
下列印刷技术中由中国人发明的有
管理者所能变革的领域或对象包括()
经典的蛋白质抗原纯化分离方法为
关于桩冠的说法以下说法哪项是错误的
负债满足下列条件之一的,应当归类为流动负债()。
治疗用干制动物腺体
既是西方教育史上有长久发展历史的教学方法,也是我国一贯重视且至今仍为中小学主要教学方法的是()。
艺术博物馆经过近200年的发展,已经从最初的“艺术家的机构”演变为今天“公众的艺术机构”。艺术博物馆的馆长、总监、策展人发现,他们现在面临的最大问题不是和捐赠人、收藏家、同行打交道,而是如何把没有受过艺术教育、缺乏相关的艺术体验的普通人吸引到艺术博物馆里来
如果执行一个语句后弹出如图所示的窗口,则这个语句是
最新回复
(
0
)