2010年阅读Text 1 来源及答案解析
(2010-07-21 20:04:37)
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杂谈 |
Of all the changes that have taken place in English-language
newspapers during the past quarter-century, perhaps the most
far-reaching has been the inexorable decline in the scope and
seriousness of their arts coverage. Not only have many newspapers
done away with their book-review sections, but several major
papers, including the Chicago Sun-Times and the Minneapolis
Star-Tribune, no longer employ full-time classical-music critics.
Even those papers that continue to review fine-arts events are
devoting less space to them, while the “think pieces” on cultural
subjects that once graced the pages of big-city Sunday papers are
becoming a thing of the past.
It is, I suspect, difficult
to the point of impossibility for the average reader under the age
of forty to imagine a time when high-quality arts criticism could
be found in most big-city newspapers. Yet a considerable number of
the most significant collections of criticism published in the 20th
century, including Virgil Thomson’s The Musical Scene (1945), Edwin
Denby’s Looking at the Dance (1949), Kenneth Tynan’s Curtains
(1961), and Hilton Kramer’s The Age of the Avant-Garde (1973)
consisted in large part of newspaper reviews. To read such books
today is to marvel at the fact that their erudite contents were
once deemed suitable for publication in general-circulation
dailies.
We are even farther removed
from the discursive newspaper reviews published in England between
the turn of the 20th century and the eve of World War II, at a time
when newsprint was dirt-cheap and stylish arts criticism was
considered an ornament to the publications in which it appeared. In
those far-off days, it was taken for granted that the critics of
major papers would write in detail and at length about the events
they covered.1 Theirs was a serious business, and even those
reviewers who wore their learning lightly, like George Bernard Shaw
and Ernest Newman, could be trusted to know what they were about.
These men (for they were all men) believed in journalism as a
calling, and were proud to be published in the daily press. “So few
authors have brains enough or literary gift enough to keep their
own end up in journalism,” Newman wrote, “that I am tempted to
define ‘journalism’ as ‘a term of contempt applied by writers who
are not read to writers who are.’”
Why, then, are virtually all of these critics forgotten? Neville Cardus, who wrote for the Manchester Guardian from 1917 until shortly before his death in 1975, is now known solely as a writer of essays on the game of cricket. During his lifetime, though, he was also one of England’s foremost classical-music critics, a stylist so widely admired that his Autobiography (1947) became a best-seller. He was knighted in 1967, the first music critic to be so honored. Yet only one of his books is now in print, and his vast body of writings on music is unknown save to specialists. How is it possible that so celebrated a critic should have slipped into near-total obscurity?
Why, then, are virtually all of these critics forgotten? Neville Cardus, who wrote for the Manchester Guardian from 1917 until shortly before his death in 1975, is now known solely as a writer of essays on the game of cricket. During his lifetime, though, he was also one of England’s foremost classical-music critics, a stylist so widely admired that his Autobiography (1947) became a best-seller. He was knighted in 1967, the first music critic to be so honored. Yet only one of his books is now in print, and his vast body of writings on music is unknown save to specialists. How is it possible that so celebrated a critic should have slipped into near-total obscurity?
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