高级英语Lesson-6-(Book-2)-Disappearing-Through-the-Skylight-课文讲解学习

更新时间:2023-06-21 03:14:02 阅读: 评论:0

Lesson 6 Disappearing Through the Skylight
Osborne Bennet Hardison Jr.阿胶糕功效
1 Science is committed to the universal. A sign of this is that the more successful a science becomes, the broader the agreement about its basic concepts: there is not a parate Chine or American or Soviet thermodynamics, for example; there is simply thermodynamics. For veral decades of the twentieth century there was a Western and a Soviet genetics, the latter associated with Lynko's theory that environmental stress can produce genetic mutations. Today Lynko's theory is discredited, and there is now only one genetics.
2 As the corollary of science, technology also exhibits the universalizing tendency. This is why the spread of technology makes the world look ever more homogeneous. Architectural styles, dress styles, musical styles--even eating styles--tend increasingly to be world styles. The world looks more homogeneous becau it is more homogeneous. Children who grow up in this world therefore experience it as a sameness rather than a diversity, and becau their identities are shaped by this sameness, their n of differences among cultures and individuals diminishes. As buildings become more alike, the people who inhabit the buildings become more alike. The result is described precily in a phra that is already familiar: the disappearance of history.
掌声与喝彩
3 The automobile illustrates the Point With great clarity. A technological innovation like streamlining or all-welded body construction may be rejected initially, but if it is important to the efficiency or economics of automobiles, it will reappear in different ways until it is not only accepted but universally regarded as an ast. Today's automobile is no longer unique to a given company or even to a given national culture, its basic features are found, with variations, in automobiles in general, no matter who makes them.
4    A few years ago the Ford Motor Company came up with the Fiesta, which it called the "World Car." Advertiments showed it surrounded by the flags of all nations. Ford explained that the cylinder block was made in England, the carburetor in Ireland, the transmission in France, the wheels in Belgium, and so forth.
5 The Fiesta appears to have sunk Without a trace. But the idea of a world car was inevitable. It was the automotive equivalent of the International Style. Ten years after the Fiesta, all of the large automakers were international. Americans had Plants
in Europe, Asia, and South America, and Europeans and Japane had plants in America and South America, and in the Soviet Union Fiat Fiat (= Fabbrica Italiana Automobile Torino ) workers refreshed
themlves with Pepsi-Cola). In the fullness of time international automakers will have plants in Egypt and India and the People's Republic of China.
6 As in architecture, so in automaking. In a given cost range, the same technology tends to produce the same solutions. The visual evidence for this is as obvious for cars as for buildings. Today, if you choo models in the same price range, you will be hard put at 500 paces to tell one makefrom another. In other words, the specifically American traits that lingered in American automobiles in the 1960s--traits that linked American cars to American history--are disappearing. Even the Volkswagen Beetle has disappeared and has taken with it the visible evidence of the history of streamlining that extends from D'Arcy Thompson to Carl Breer to Ferdinand Porsche.
7 If man creates machines, machines in turn shape their creators. As the automobile is universalized, it universalizes tho who u it. Like the World Car he drives, modern man is becoming universal. No longer quite an individual, no longer quite the product of a unique geography and culture, he moves from one climate-controlled shopping mall to another, from one airport to the next, from one Holiday Inn to its successor three hundred miles down the road; but somehow his location never changes. He is cosmopolitan. The price he pays is that he no longer has a home in the traditional n of the word. The benefit is that he begins to suspect home in the traditional n
is another name for limitations, and that home in the modern n is everywhere and always surrounded by neighbors.
鲤鱼做法8 The universalizing imperative of technology is irresistible. Barring the catastrophe of nuclear war, it will continue to shape both modern culture and the consciousness of tho who inhabit that culture.
9 This brings us to art and history again. Reminiscing on the early work of Francis Picabia and Marcel Duchamp, Madame Gabrielle Buffet-Picabia wrote of the discovery of the machine aesthetic in 1949:"I remember a time ... when every artist thought he owed it to himlf to turn his back on the Eiffel Tower, as a protest against the architectural blasphemy with which it filled The discovery and rehabilitation of ... machines soon generated propositions which evaded all tradition, above all, a mobile, extra human plasticit y which was ”
10 Art is, in one definition, simply an effort to name the real world. Are machines "the real world" or only its surface? Is the real world that easy to find? Science has shown the in substantiality of the world. It has thus undermined an article of faith: the thingliness of things. At the same time, it has produced images of orders of reality underlying the thingliness of things. Are images of cells or of molecules or of galaxies more or less real than images of machines? Science has also produced im
ages that are pure artifacts. Are images of lf-squared dragons more or less real than images of molecules?
11 The skepticism of modern science about the thingliness of things implies a new appreciation of the humanity of art entirely consistent with Kandinsky's obrvation in On the Spiritual in Art that beautiful art "springs from inner need, which springs from the soul." Modern art opens on a world who reality is not "out there" in nature defined as things en from a middle distance but "in here" in the soul or the mind. It is a world radically emptied of history becau it is a form of perception rather than a content.吃粽子是什么节日
12 The disappearance of history is thus    a liberation--what Madame Buffet-Picabia refers to as the discovery of "a mobile extra-human plasticity which [is] absolutely new." Like science, modern art often express this feeling of liberation through play--in painting in the playfulness of Picasso and Joan Miro and in poetry in the nonn of Dada and the mock heroics of a poem like Wallace Stevens's "The Comedian as the Letter C."
13 The playfulness of the modern aesthetic is, finally, its most striking--and also its most rious and, by corollary, its most disturbing--feature. The playfulness imitates the playfulness of science that pro
山西财经大学研究生
duces game theory and virtual particles and black holes and that, by introducing human growth genes into cows, forces students of ethics to reexamine the definition of cannibalism. The importance of play in the modern aesthetic should not come as a surpri. It is announced in every city in the developed world by the fantastic and playful buildings of postmodernism and neo-modernism and by the fantastic juxtapositions of architectural styles that typify collage city and urban adhocism.
14 Today modern culture includes the geometries of the International Style, the fantasies of facadism, and the gamesmanship of theme parks and muum villages . It pretends at times to be static but it is really dynamic. Its buildings move and sway and reflect dreamy visions of everything that is going on around them. It surrounds its
citizens with the linear sculpture of pipelines and interstate highways and high-tension lines and the delicate virtuosities of the surfaces of the Chrysler Airflow and the Boeing 747 and the lacy weavings of circuits etched on silicon, as well as with the brutal asrtiveness of oil tankers and bulldozers and the Tinkertoy complications of truss and geodesic domes and lunar landers. It abounds in images and sounds and values utterly different from tho of the world of natural things en from a middle distance.
15 It is a human world, but one that is human in ways no one expected. The image it reveals is not the worn and battered face that stares from Leonardo's lf-portrait much less the one that stares, bleary and uninspired, every morning from the bathroom mirror. The are the faces of history. It is, rather, the image of an eternally playful and eternally youthful power that makes order whether order is there or not and that having made one order is quite capable of putting it aside and creating an entirely different or the way a child might build one structure from a t of blocks and then without malice and purely in the spirit of play demolish it and begin again. It is an image of the power that made humanity possible in the first place.
16 The banks of the nineteenth century tended to be neoclassic structures of marble or granite faced with ponderous rows of columns. They made a statement" "We are solid. We are permanent. We are as reliable as history. Your money is safe in our vaults."
17 Today's banks are airy structures of steel and glass, or they are store-fronts with slot-machinelike terminals, or trailers parked on the lots of suburban shopping malls.
18 The vaults have been replaced by magnetic tapes. In a computer, money is quences of digital signals endlessly recorded, erad, procesd, and reprocesd, and endlessly modified by other co
mputers. The statement of modern banks is "We are abstract like art and almost invisible like the Crystal Palace. If we exist at all, we exist as an airy medium in which your transactions are completed and your wealth incread."
19 That, perhaps, establishes the logical limit of the modern aesthetic. If so, the limit is a long way ahead, but it can be made out, just barely, through the haze over the road. As surely as nature is being swallowed up by the mind, the banks, you might say, are disappearing through their own skylights.人性的优点读后感
(from Disappearing Through The Skylight )
孩子感冒
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NOTES
1. Hardison: Osborne Bennet Hardison Jr. was born in San Diego, California in 1928. He was educated at the University of North Carolina and the University of Wisconsin. He has taught at Princeton and the University of North Carolina. He is the author of Lyrics and Elegies (1958), The Enduring Monument (1962), English Literary Criticism: The Renaissance(1964), Toward Freedom an
鸭肉d Dignity: The Humanities and the Idea of Humanity(1973), Entering the Maze: Identity and Change in Modern Culture (1981) and Disappearing Through the Skylight (1980).
2. Ford Motor Company: one of the largest car manufacturing companies of America
3. International Style: as its name indicates, an architectural style easily reproduced and accepted by countries throughout the world. The structures u simple geometric forms of straight lines, squares, rectangles, etc., in their designs. It is often criticized as a rubber-stamp method of design. The structures are meant to be simple, practical and cost-effective.
4. Fiat: the biggest Italian car manufacturing company. Fiat is an acronym of the Italian name, Fabbrica Italiana Automobile Torina.
5. Pepsi-Cola: a brand name of an American soft drink. It is a strong competitor of another well-known American soft drink, Coca-Cola.
6. Volkswagen Beetle: model name of a car designed and manufactured by the German car manufacturing company, Volkswagen
7.D'Arcy Thompson: D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson (1860-1948) placed biology on a mathematical fo
undation. In his book On Growth and Form. Thompson invented the term Airflow to describe the curvature impod by water on the body of a fish, The airflow or streamling influenced the future designing of cars and airplanes to increa their speed and reduce air friction.
8. Carl Breer: auto-designer, who designed the Chrysler Airflow of 1934.
9. Ferdinand Porshe: auto-designer of the original Volkswagen
10. Holiday Inn: name adopted by a hotel chain
11. Picabia: Francis Picabia (1878-1953). French painter. After working in an impressionist style, Picabia was influenced by Cubism and later was one of the original exponents of Dada in Europe and the United States.

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