满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

The novelist, Harriet Beecher Stowe, bor...

The novelist, Harriet Beecher Stowe, born 200 years ago, was a poor housewife with six children, and she suffered from various illnesses. Driven by the hatred of slavery, she found time to write Uncle Tom’s Cabin, which became the most influential novel in American history and caused great change, both at home and abroad.

Today, however, the book has a different reputation, owing to the popular image of its character, Uncle Tom, whose name has become a saying for a cowardly(懦弱的)black man who betrays his race.

But this view is wrong: the original Uncle Tom was physically and morally strong, an inspiration for black people and other oppressed(被压迫的)people worldwide. Indeed, that was why, in the mid-19th century, Southerners attacked Uncle Tom’s Cabin as a dangerously destructive book, while Northern reformers—especially black people—often praised it.

The book was influential overseas too. In Russia it inspired Vladimir Lenin, who recalled it as his favorite book in childhood. It was the first American novel to be translated and published in China, and it fueled anti-slavery movements in Cuba and Brazil.

The book’s progressive appeal was the character of Uncle Tom himself: a strong man who is notable because he does not betray his race; one reason he gives up escaping from his plantation(种植园)is that he doesn’t want to put his fellow slaves in danger. And he is finally killed because he refuses to tell his master where two runaway slaves are hiding.

Unfortunately, these themes were lost in many of the stage versions of Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

The play, seen by more people than those who read the book, remained popular up to the 1950s and still appears occasionally. But in the play, Stowe’s revolutionary themes were drowned.

But it doesn’t have to be that way; indeed; during the civil rights era it was those who most closely resembled Uncle Tom—Stowe’s Uncle Tom, not the embarrassed one of popular myth—that proved most effective in promoting progress. Both Stowe and Uncle Tom deserve our reconsideration and our respect.

1.Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin because she                     . 

A.wanted to earn money to support her family

B.tried to set an example to her six children

C.hated slavery from the bottom of her heart

D.had similar life experiences to Uncle Tom

2. Which of the following is TRUE about the influence of the book?

A.It was the first American novel to be translated into Russian.

B.It was the most influential book for Vladimir Lenin in his life

C.It also gave rise to anti-slavery movements in faraway Africa.

D.It inspired black people and people who were suffering in the world.

3.What can we learn about Uncle Tom in the book?

A.he helps his fellow slaves to avoid getting into danger.

B.He is a black man who betrays his race.

C.He manages to escape from the plantation.

D.He kills himself instead of giving away the slaves.

4.According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?

A.The themes of revolution and progress in the book were lost in the play

B.There are more people who have read the book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, than those who have seen the stage version.

C.The play was very popular and it is still put on from time to time today.

D.It was Uncle Tom in the book that promoted the progress of mankind.

 

1.C 2.D 3.A 4.B 【解析】 试题分析: 1.C 细节题。根据第一段2,3行Driven by the hatred of slavery, she found time to write Uncle Tom’s Cabin说明C正确。 2.D 细节题。根据第三段1,2行the original Uncle Tom was physically and morally strong, an inspiration for black people and other oppressed(被压迫的)people worldwide说明D正确。 3.A 细节题。根据第五段后三行one reason he gives up escaping from his plantation(种植园)is that he doesn’t want to put his fellow slaves in danger. And he is finally killed because he refuses to tell his master where two runaway slaves are hiding.说明他一直在帮助那些奴隶,保护他们没有危险,故A正确。 4.B 推理题。根据倒数第二段第一行The play, seen by more people than those who read the book,说明看书的人没有看到这部电影的人多,故B错误。 考点:考查文化类阅读
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

After two classes, I started to recognize several of the faces in each class. There was always someone braver than the others who would introduce themselves and ask me questions about how I was liking Forks. I tried to be diplomatic, so mostly I just lied a lot to appear to be skilled at dealing with people. At least I never needed the map.

One girl sat next to me in both Trig and Spanish, and she walked with me to the cafeteria for lunch. She was tiny, several inches shorter than my five feet four inches, but her wildly curly dark hair made up a lot of the difference between our heights. I couldn't remember her name, so I smiled and nodded as she gossiped about teachers and classes. I didn't try to keep up.

We sat at the end of a full table with several of her friends, who she introduced to me. I forgot all their names as soon as she spoke them. They seemed impressed by her bravery in speaking to me. The boy from England Eric, waved at me from across the room.

It was there, sitting in the lunchroom, trying to make conversation with seven curious strangers, that I first saw them.

They were sitting in the corner of the cafeteria, as far away from where I sat as possible in the long room. There were five of them. They weren't talking, and they weren't eating, though they each had a tray of untouched food in front of them. They weren't staring at me, unlike most of the other students, so it was safe to stare at them without fear of meeting an over interested pair of eyes. But it was none of these things that caught and held my attention.

I stared because their faces, so different, so similar, were all extremely, inhumanly beautiful. They were faces you never expected to see except perhaps on the airbrushed pages of a fashion magazine, or painted by an old master as the face of an angel. It was hard to decide who was the most beautiful -- maybe the perfect blond girl, or the bronze-haired boy.

1.What does the underlined word “diplomatic” mean?

A.clever

B.smooth

C.honest

D.delight

2.From the passage, we can infer that _______________.

A.“I” was really liking the new place.

B.“I” had a bad memory, so it’s hard to remember names.

C.“I” was good at making friends.

D.“I” was not interested in what the girl said.

3. According to the last two paragraphs, why did “they” catch “my” attention?

A.Because “they” looked incredibly beautiful.

B.Because “they” weren’t talking.

C.Because “they” sat in the corner.

D.Because “they” didn’t eat the food.

4.According to the passage, which statement is NOT true?

A.The girl walked with “me” was a little short.

B.“I” saw the five students for the first time.

C.Those students sitting in the corner had finished their food.

D.“I” probably wanted to know more about those five students.

 

查看答案

Mothers can still offer comfort, even from a distance, a new study has found. The results show that simply hearing their mothers’ voice over the phone works just as well at calming the nerves of stressed children as a real-life pat on the shoulder.

The soothing(抚慰的)effect is most likely due to the release of the hormone(荷尔蒙), oxytocin(催生素), in the brain, the researchers say. This “love hormone” is known to quell stress and is likely to be involved in social connections, including those between a mother and a child.

Previous work has revealed that this hormone is released during physical contact with a mother. “But it’s clear from these results that a mother’s voice can have the same effect as a hug, even if she isn’t actually standing there,” said the researcher, Leslie Seltzer, a biological scientist.

Seltzer tested a group of 61 girls, aged 7 to 12, by having them make an unprepared speech and solve a series of maths problems in front of a group of strangers, sending their hearts racing and levels of cortisol—a hormone associated with stress—soaring.

Facing a challenge like that raises stress levels of a lot of people. Once stressed, a third of the girls were comforted in person by their mothers with hugs. A third of the girls watched an emotionally neutral 75-minute video. The rest were handed a telephone with their mothers on the line.

For the girls who interacted in person or over the phone with their mothers, the levels of the “love hormone” rose significantly, and the stress-marking hormone was washed away. This effect didn’t show up for participants who watched the video.

Seltzer is now testing the amount of oxytocin released with other communication methods—like text messaging—and hopes to see the research spread out from human subjects. “It’s not just us, of course. Lots of very social species have voices,” she said. “on the one hand, we are curious to see if this effect is unique to humans. On the other, we’re hoping researchers who study vocal communication will consider looking at oxytocin release in other animals and apply it to broader questions of social behavior and evolutionary biology.

1.Mothers’ voice over the phone can reduce children’s nerves according to the study, because           .

A.children can imagine their mothers’ hugs on the line

B.children enjoy their mothers’ voice and forget their worries

C.mothers are good at comforting their children, even on the phone

D.mothers’ voice can promote the release of the love hormone

2.The underlined word “quell” in the second paragraph probably means “         ”.

A.cause or bring

B.delay or direct

C.stop or reduce

D.develop or train

3. From the study, we know that                .

A.the level of cortisol determines how stressed a person is

B.the 61 girls were divided into two groups in the research

C.the recent study had the same results as the previous one

D.watching a video is the best way to reduce one’s stress

4.From the last paragraph, we can conclude that          .

A.text messaging has the same effect on oxytocin release as telephoning

B.the effect of a mother's voice on oxytocin in animals is still not known

C.the effect of communication on stress is unique to humans

D.the research has been applied to social behavior and evolutionary biology

 

查看答案

It may not be news to parents of teenage girls, but researchers have confirmed that no one can stop their 16-year-old daughter from deciding how the family spends its money.

The willpower and determination of teenage girls give them a big say in how a family’s money is spent on everything from food and meals to mobile phones, and, of course, clothes. Teenage boys did not show up at all in the analysis, which was designed to find out the influence of young people on household spending.

The findings on the spending power of teenage girls were calculated from Office for National Statistics records of family spending during the 1980s and 1990s. Researchers examined how much money went on services and leisure goods in different kinds of homes. They checked spending on food, restaurant meals, alcohol, tobacco, services, heating, transport, clothes and sports in 2,745 British families.

They found that teenage girls in the UK typically played an active role in family decisions about the allocation(分配)of household resources. But older children— those over the age of 21 who are still living with their parents—appear to have no say in household decisions.

They also tried to calculate to what extent the bargaining power of a teenager affected family budgets. “Every parent knows that children, even at a very early age, have their own preferences with regard to consumption, researchers said. “But children are only interested in a limited range of goods—mainly sweets and toys—and parents are able to use punishment to reduce their children’s bargaining power or remove it.”  When they become teenagers, however, girls are much more independent and they are capable of earning their own money, which improves their bargaining power in family decisions.

The researchers could not explain why girls have more influence over spending while the evidence for boys is much less conclusive. However, this study could be of great significance to market research and how marketers target children.

1. From the passage we can learn that            .

A.teenage girls have more influence over family budgets than teenage boys

B.teenage boys don't want to decide on household spending

C.teenage boys have some influence over household

D.teenage girls have weaker willpower and determination than teenage boys

2.What does the underlined part “give them a big say” in the second paragraph mean?

A.Make them dare to say something.

B.Make them want to know.

C.Make them say something meaningful.

D.Make their influence stronger.

3.It appears that household decisions are NOT affected by        .

A.girls living with parents

B.girls over 21

C.girls over 12

D.girls living alone

4.How can parents reduce children’s bargaining power?

A.By persuading them

B.By offering them sweets or toys.

C.By threatening to punish them.

D.By allocating household resources.

 

查看答案

Dear son,

The day that you see me old and I am already not in good health, have patience and try to understand me.

If I get dirty when eating, if I can not dress, have patience and remember the hours I spent   31   it to you. If, when I speak to you, I   32   the same things thousand and one times, do not   33   me, listen to me. When you were small, I had to read to you thousand and one times the same story   34   you got to sleep. When I do not want to have a   35  , neither shame me nor scold me. Remember when I had to chase you with thousand excuses I   36  , in order that you wanted to bathe. When you see my   37   little about new technologies, give me the necessary time and do not look at me with your mocking( 嘲弄 ) smile. I taught you   38   to do so many things: to eat good, to dress well, to confront life…. When at some moment I lose the memory or the  39   of our conversation, let me have the necessary time to remember, and if I cannot do it, do not become nervous, as the most important thing is not our conversation but surely to be with you and to have you   40   to me.

If ever I do not want to eat, do not force me. I know well   41   I need to and when not. When my   42   legs do not allow me to walk, give me your   43  , the same way I did when you gave your first   44  . And when someday I say to you that I do not want to   45   any more ---- that I want to rest forever, do not get 46  . Someday you will understand.

Try to understand that my age is not lived but survived. Some day you will discover that, despite my mistakes, I always wanted the   47   thing for you and that I tried to prepare the way for you. You must not feel sad, angry or impotent( 无可奈何 ) for seeing me   48   you. You must be next to me, try to understand me and to help me as I did it when you 49   living. Help me to walk, help me to end my way with love and   50  . I will pay you by a smile and by the immense love I have had always for you.

I love you, Son.

Your father

1.

A.giving

B.teaching

C.coming

D.pointing

 

2.

A.praise

B.think

C.repeat

D.criticize

 

3.

A.interrupt

B.disturb

C.look

D.avoid

 

4.

A.when

B.after

C.since

D.until

 

5.

A.rest

B.word

C.shower

D.sleep

 

6.

A.discovered

B.invented

C.noticed

D.assumed

 

7.

A.knowing

B.fearing

C.enjoying

D.consulting

 

8.

A.what

B.when

C.how

D.why

 

9.

A.news

B.attitude

C.material

D.thread

 

10.

A.talking

B.listening

C.responding

D.appealing

 

11.

A.where

B.how

C.that

D.when

 

12.

A.tired

B.short

C.long

D.strong

 

13.

A.leg

B.ear

C.hand

D.mind

 

14.

A.step

B.pace

C.laugh

D.cry

 

15.

A.talk

B.live

C.write

D.sleep

 

16.

A.careful

B.interested

C.calm

D.angry

 

17.

A.last

B.first

C.best

D.most

 

18.

A.near

B.behind

C.below

D.against

 

19.

A.made

B.started

C.earned

D.found

 

20.

A.mercy

B.care

C.excuse

D.patience

 

查看答案

The shortage of entry-level job is the main reason that more university students are    

   business of their own right after graduation.

A.taking up

B.setting up

C.picking up

D.making up

 

查看答案
试题属性

Copyright @ 2008-2019 满分5 学习网 ManFen5.COM. All Rights Reserved.