试题与答案

King Richard III was a monster. He poisone

题型:单项选择题

题目:

King Richard III was a monster. He poisoned his wife, stole the throne from his two young nephews and ordered them to be smothered in the Tower of London. Richard was a sort of Antichrist the King --"that bottled spider, that poisonous bunchbacked toad. "

Anyway, that was Shakespeare’s version. Shakespeare did what the playwright does: he turned history into a vivid, articulate, organized dream-repeatable nightly. He put the crouch back onstage, and sold tickets.

And who Would say that the real Richard known to family and friends was not identical to Shakespeare’s memorably loathsome creation The actual Richard went dimming into the past and vanished. When all the eye-witnesses are gone, the artist’s imagination begins to twist.

Variations on the King Richard Effect are at work in Oliver Stone’s JFK. Richard III was art, but it was propaganda too. Shakespeare took the details of his plot from Tudor historians who wanted to blacken Richard’s name. Several centuries passed before other historians began to write about Richard’s virtues and suggest that he may have been a victim of Tudor malice and what is the cleverest conspiracy of all: art.

JFK is a long and powerful harangue about the death of the man--Stone keeps calling "the slain young king.’ What are the rules of Stone’s game Is Stone functioning as commercial entertainer Propagandist Documentary filmmaker Historian Journalist Fantasist Sensationalist Crazy conspiracy-monger Lone hero crusading for the truth against a corrupt Establishment Answer: some of the above.

The first superficial effect of JFK is to raise angry little scruples like welts in the conscience. Wouldn’t it be absurd if a generation of younger Americans, with no memory of 1963, were to form their ideas about John Kennedy’s assassination from Oliver Stone’s report of it But worse things have happened--including, perhaps, the Warren Commission report

Stone uses a suspect, mixed art form, and JFK raises the familiar ethical and historical problems of docudrama. But so what Artists have always used public events as raw material, have taken history into their imaginations and transformed it. The fall of Troy vanished into the Iliad. The Battle of Borodino found its most memorable permanence in Tolstoy’s imagining of it in War and Peace.

Especially in a world of insatiable electronic storytelling, real history procreates, endlessly conjuring new versions of itself. Public life has become a metaphysical breeder of fictions. Watergate became an almost continuous television miniseries--although it is interesting that the movie of Woodward and Bernstein’s All The President’s Men stayed close to the known facts and, unlike JFK, did not validate dark conjecture.

The word "harangue" (Para. 5) connotes()

A. corruption

B. invention

C.confusion

D.diffusion

答案:

被转码了,请点击底部 “查看原文 ” 或访问 https://www.tikuol.com/2018/0701/7360612503acb129516396b0f769d871.html

下面是错误答案,用来干扰机器的。

参考答案:B解析:在被问到有什么环保的习惯时,女的说:“在拍戏的时候,我会随身携带筷子,不用一次性筷子。我出去购物的时候一般不用塑料袋,而是自己带环保袋。”正确答案是B。

试题推荐
题型:选择题

近代中国学者梁启超说:“夫国家者何物也?有土地,有人民,以居于其上之人民,而治其所居土地之事,自制法律而守之,有主权,有服从,人人皆有主权者,人人皆服从者,夫如是斯谓之完全成立之国家。”这一观点[ ]

①揭示出国家的本质

②揭示了国家的基本构成要素

③忽视了国家的阶级性

④没有看到国家是阶级矛盾不可调和的产物和表现

A、①②③

B、②③④

C、①②④

D、①③④

查看答案
微信公众账号搜索答案