ChaseDream
搜索
返回列表 发新帖
查看: 2232|回复: 1
打印 上一主题 下一主题

请教 og28-174 谢谢

[复制链接]
楼主
发表于 2007-3-6 18:34:00 | 只看该作者

请教 og28-174 谢谢

Passage 28

Joseph Glarthaar’s Forged in Battle is not the first excel-

lent study of Black soldiers and their White officers in the

Civil War, but it uses more soldiers’ letters and diaries—

including rare material from Black soldiers—and concen-

(5) rates more intensely on Black-White relations in Black

regiments than do any of its predecessors. Glathaar’s title

expresses his thesis: loyalty, friendship, and respect among

White officers and Black soldiers were fostered by the

mutual dangers they faced in combat.

(10 ) Glarthaar accurately describes the government’s discrim-

inatory treatment of Black soldiers in pay, promotion, medi

cal care, and job assignments, appropriately emphasizing

the campaign by Black soldiers and their officers to get the

opportunity to fight. That chance remained limited through

(15) out the war by army policies that kept most Black units

serving in rear-echelon assignments and working in labor

battalions. Thus, while their combat death rate was only

one-third that of White units, their mortality rate from

disease, a major killer in his war, was twice as great.

(20) Despite these obstacles, the courage and effectiveness of

several Black units in combat won increasing respect from

initially skeptical or hostile White soldiers. As one White

officer put it, “they have fought their way into the respect

of all the army.”

(25) In trying to demonstrate the magnitude of this attitudi-

nal change, however, Glarthaar seems to exaggerate the

prewar racism of the White men who became officers in

Black regiments. “Prior to the war,” he writes of these

men, “virtually all of them held powerful racial prejudices.”

(30) While perhaps true of those officers who joined Black

units for promotion or other self-serving motives, this state-

ment misrepresents the attitudes of the many abolitionists

who became officers in Black regiments. Having spent

years fighting against the race prejudice endemic in Ameri-

(35) can society; they participated eagerly in this military

experiment, which they hoped would help African Americans

achieve freedom and postwar civil equality. By current

standards of racial egalitarianism, these men’s paternalism

toward African Americans was racist. But to call their

(40) feelings “powerful racial prejudices” is to indulge in

generational chauvinism—to judge past eras by present standards.

 

174. Which of the following actions can best be described as indulging in “generational chauvinism” (lines 40-41) as that practice is defined in the passage?

(A)   Condemning a present-day monarch merely because many monarchs have been tyrannical in the past.

(B)   Clinging to the formal standards of politeness common in one’s youth to such a degree that any relaxation of those standards is intolerable

(C)   Questioning the accuracy of a report written by an employee merely because of the employee’s gender.

(D)  Deriding the superstitions accepted as “science” in past eras without acknowledging the prevalence of irrational beliefs today. (E)

(E)   Labeling a nineteenth-century politician as “corrupt” for engaging in once-acceptable practices considered intolerable today.

请问这题是什么意思,怎么理解阿?最后一段也不能理解?谢谢

174. Which of the following actions can best be described as indulging in “generational chauvinism” (lines 40-41) as that practice is defined in the passage?

(A)   Condemning a present-day monarch merely because many monarchs have been tyrannical in the past.

(B)   Clinging to the formal standards of politeness common in one’s youth to such a degree that any relaxation of those standards is intolerable

(C)   Questioning the accuracy of a report written by an employee merely because of the employee’s gender.

(D)  Deriding the superstitions accepted as “science” in past eras without acknowledging the prevalence of irrational beliefs today. (E)

(E)   Labeling a nineteenth-century politician as “corrupt” for engaging in once-acceptable practices considered intolerable today.

请问这题是什么意思,怎么理解阿?最后一段也不能理解?谢谢

沙发
发表于 2013-5-6 17:02:52 | 只看该作者
提示: 该帖被管理员或版主屏蔽
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 立即注册

Mark一下! 看一下! 顶楼主! 感谢分享! 快速回复:

手机版|ChaseDream|GMT+8, 2025-6-23 20:17
京公网安备11010202008513号 京ICP证101109号 京ICP备12012021号

ChaseDream 论坛

© 2003-2025 ChaseDream.com. All Rights Reserved.

返回顶部