- 1
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(66)
- 2
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(65)
- 3
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(67)
- 4
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(64)
- 7
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(60)
- 9
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(59)
- 10
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(57)
- 11
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(58)
- 12
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(56)
- 13
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(54)
- 14
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(55)
- 15
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(52)
- 16
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(53)
- 17
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about what how go to reflect
everyday audience hero worthless modern link
Another point to consider is Miller’s conception of (51)______the theatre should do. He is both a psychological and a social dramatist. As a psychological dramatist he studies character, the motives and reasons behind the behavior. of individuals, and presents them to his (52)______so that his individual characters become convincingly alive. Often, these people are ordinary, everyday types, but ones whose actions are made significant by the dramatist. For example, the lives of ordinary citizens (53)______bout their daily business in their homes may not obviously appear interesting, but the dramatist can indicate that their daily lives are important, that they are interesting or unusual as people and that the audience may see their own situations and paychological states (54)______in the characters the dramatist has created. Death of a Salesman is a good example of this. Of course, all dramatists and novelists try to make the actions of their characters relevant to other people, and most analyze closely the minds of the characters they have created in order to establish what makes them function as individuals. Where Miller differs from many of the others is in the type of person that he has created. Most of his (55)______are ordinary people: they do not seem to be different from anyone who can be met in any street; and this, it might be argued, adds force (56)______his plays, since none of the characters are remote---we share their feelings, and understand their difficulties. Also, Miller is able to show that (57)______people can rise above the ordinary when challenged.
Miller is a social dramatist in the sense that Death of a Salesman comments on the nature of society. Miller is concerned about society and the values which it holds. This means that Miller has often been regraded as an ally of the American Left, wishing to challenge the values of society, showing those values as (58)______, and suggesting that a change may be necessary. Drama can expose the ills of society, make people ware that there is something wrong with the system. (59)______with Miller’s attitude to society is his treatment of the middle class in the play. He was writing for the middle class as well as (60)______them.
(From Miller’s Theatre and Miller’s Ideas)
(51)
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(40)
- 29
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(39)
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(37)
- 31
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(38)
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(35)
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(34)
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(36)
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(32)
- 36
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(33)
- A.Excited
- B.Anxious
- C.Hopeful.
- D.Depressed
- A.She is a good reader of popular stories.
- B.She is an excellent doctor with lots of experience.
- C.She is a distinguished writer creating lots of works.
- D.She is a great teacher giving encouraging life lessons.
- A.How to avoid social activities.
- B.How to deal with the disease.
- C.How to be a teacher.
- D.How to help others.
- A.The author didn’t know whether she should continue studying.
- B.The author couldn’t miss Ms. Costelloe’s first English class.
- C.The author didn’t want to stay in the hospital.
- D.The author couldn’t endure the ringing bells.
- A.handle current situations
- B.pass down family legends
- C.empower the select members
- D.facilitate knowledge transmission
- A.explanatory
- B.argumentative
- C.narrative
- D.descriptive
- A.ignorance of family history
- B.scarcity of family storytelling
- C.indifference to family tradition
- D.incomplete family value system
- A.connect happiness with faith
- B.remember the historical events
- C.show respects for family ancestors
- D.shape the value system of children
- A.To change the Indians who believed in Christianity.
- B.To persuade the Indians to believe in Christianity.
- C.To transfer the Indians to Christian areas.
- D.To substitute the Indians with Christians.
- A.In 1519
- B.In 1521
- C.In 1531
- D.In 1620
- A.tried to be friends with Indians
- B.regarded wealth as the most important
- C.came to settle down with their families
- D.put the Bible into native Indian language
- A.William Bradford
- B.Francisco Pizarro
- C.Hernando Cortes
- D.John Winthrop
- A.Prossessing a garden and a park.
- B.Being able to wheel himself about.
- C.Having survived the serious wound.
- D.Having a bath-chair with a motor attachment.
- As those people on board the Mayflower settled on the Atlantic coast in 1620, they did not have to wait for roads to be built to receive passengers and produce from the other parts of the world or to send out their produce in exchange. Safe harbors--
- In 1620, when the sober William Bradford and the prudent(谨慎的)John Winthrop came to “New” England, they had another idea. They came not for gold and glory but to build homes for themselves, their children, and their grandchildren. They aimed to make a “cit
- A.would live in a town near the Potomac River
- B.had products from other parts of the world
- C.had an elegant London-made coach
- D.found safe harbors
- A.had a honeymoon
- B.often asked for leave
- C.was wounded
- D.got married
- A.an army officer’s family
- B.a very poor family
- C.a farmer’s family
- D.a noble family
- A.he could have a child
- B.he could be medically treated
- C.he could keep the Chatterley name alive
- D.he could live on a rather adequate income
- A.Hollywood and the Oscar Award
- B.The Oscar Award and Its History
- C.The Oscar Award and Its Ceremony
- D.Hollywood and the Cinema Industry
- A.anyone who pays the highest price
- B.anyone who offers $861,542
- C.the Academy for any price
- D.the Academy for only $1
- A.The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science
- B.The Academy Award of Merit
- C.The Hollywood Award
- D.The Citizen Kane
- A.Official
- B.Audience
- C.Secret
- D.Cheat
- A.They often walk.
- B.They can go up and down.
- C.Their wings are made of hand bones.
- D.Their muscles can power the up stroke.
- A.It will do dive attacks.
- B.It will fly back into the nest.
- C.It will hide among the flowers.
- D.It will go away from its territory.
- A.From the way they fly
- B.From the food they live on
- C.From the place they live in
- D.From the sound of their wing beats
- A.They are adapted to collect nectar from flowers.
- B.They are too small to protect the tongues.
- C.They have different colours.
- D.They come in 328 shapes.
- As tough as they are, hummingbirds still face a few clever natural enemies. Hummers have been caught by dragonflies, trapped in spider webs, and snatched by frogs. Other birds occasionally eat hummingbirds. where do most hummingbird
- A.In plains
- B.In deserts
- C.In mountains
- D.In tropical rain forests