问题 单项选择题

Military victories, trade, missionary zeal, racial arrogance and a genius for bureaucracy all played well-documented roles in making the British Empire the largest the world has known. Rather less well understood was the importance of the moustache. A monumental new history, The Decline and Fall of the British Empire by Piers Brendon, promises to restore this neglected narrative to its rightful place in the national story.
Dr. Brendon, a Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge University, argues that colonial moustaches had a clear practical purpose: to demonstrate virility and intimidate the Empire’s subject peoples. The waxing and waning of the British moustache precisely mirrored the fortunes of the Empire-blooming beneath the noses of the East India Company’s officers, finding full expression in Lord Kitchener’s bushy appendage and fading out with the Suez crisis in Anthony Eden’s apologetic wisps.
This analysis of the growth of the stiff upper lip is an essential strand of Dr. Brendon’s epic 650-page political, cultural, economic and social history of the Empire, which is published on October 18. "It is a running gag in a serious book, but it does give one a point of reference," he said yesterday. In the 18th and early 19th century, sophisticated Britons wore wigs but spurned facial hair. The exception was the King, George III, whose unshaven appearance was mocked as a sign of his madness. However, by the 1830s the "moustache movement" was in the ascendancy. British officers, copying the impressive moustaches that they encountered on French and Spanish soldiers during the Napoleonic Wars, started the craze, but the real impetus came form India.
Just as British troops in Afghanistan today are encouraged to grow beards to ease their dealings with local tribesmen, so the attitudes of Indian troops under the command of East India Company officers in the first half of the 19th century altered the appearance of the British soldier. "For the Indian sepoy the moustache was a symbol of virility. They laughed at the unshaven British officers," Dr. Brendon said. In 1854 moustaches were made compulsory for the company’s Bombay regiment. The fashion took Britain by storm as civilians imitated their heroes.
Dr. Brendon writes. "During and after the Crimean War, barbers advertised different patterns in their windows such as the ’Raglan’ and the Cardigan’." Moustaches were clipped, trimmed and waxed "until they curved like sabres and bristled like bayonets". After 1918 moustaches became thinner and humbler as the Empire began to gasp for breath, even as it continued to expand territorially. It had been fatally wounded, Dr. Brendon suggests, by the very belief in the freedom that it had preached. After the victory over Germany and Japan in 1945, independence movements across the red-painted sections of the world map, and Britain’s own urgent domestic priorities, meant that the Empire was doomed.
The moustache too was in terminal decline. "It had become a joke thanks to Charlie Chaplin and Groucho Marx. It had become an international symbol of ’villainy’ thanks to Hitler’s toothbrush," writes Dr. Brendon. In Britain it was also synonymous with the "Colonel Blimps"o clinging to an outmoded idea of colonial greatness.
In Eden’s faint moustache Britain’s diminished international status found a fitting symbol. It all but disappeared on TV and, moments before his broadcast on the eve of the fateful occupation of the Suez Canal in 1956, his wife had to blacken the bristles with mascara. His successor, Harold Macmillan, was the last British Prime Minister to furnish his upper lip. Harold Wilson, the self-styled man of the people, had been clean shaven since the 1940s, Dr. Brendon notes. "He obviously believed that the white hot technological revolution was not to be operated with a moustache.\

According to the passage, the Crimean War which witnessed the development of different patterns of the British moustache was fought ______.

A.in the early 19th century

B.in the 18th century

C.in the middle of the 19th century

D.in the late 18th century

答案

参考答案:C

单项选择题
材料分析题

分析图文资料,完成下题。

        中亚地区与我国西部有长达3300千米的边界线,是当今世界石油、天然气等资源储量最丰富的地区之一。苏联的解体和中亚五国的独立,凸显了中亚地区在国际战略格局中的地位。

材料一:

         1941年苏联卫国战争爆发后,苏联国防委员会决定,把莫斯科、列宁格勒以及国家中心地区其他工业城市的特大工厂的设备、物资和人力资源全部或部分迁移到大后方,即乌拉尔、西伯利亚和中亚地区。截至1941年底,被迁走并迅速投产的工业企业已达1523家,其中有1360家属于国防工业部门。随后成立了国家疏散工作委员会,制定企业疏散问题的法令。苏联国防委员会和国家疏散工作委员会统筹领导疏散工作。

        1942年前8个月的统计表明,上述地区的工业产品总值已经达到344亿卢布,而1940年全年只有480亿卢布。1942年12月苏联国家计划委员会指出,在国家东部地区的辽阔土地上重建的疏散企业是机械制造业取得的最重要成果,这是一个地理分布方面的巨大飞跃。

                                                                                                       ——摘编自《苏联社会主义经济史》

材料二:

        哈萨克斯坦是中亚最大的国家,工农业较发达,主要有采矿、冶金、机械制造等工业。2007年以来,哈萨克斯坦成为中亚地区最重要的油气生产和输出国。2009年12月14 日,中国一中亚天然气管道(见下图)通气仪式在土库曼斯坦阿姆河右岸举行。该天然气管道开通前,中国从中亚进口的天然气主要依靠海运;管道开通后,不仅缩短了天然气的运输距离,而且安全系数大大提高。中亚各国在能源战略上,希望实现出口的多元化。同时,中亚各国能源企业的发展也迫切需要引进国际资本和技术。 

根据材料一、二,分析哈萨克斯坦工业分布的主要特点及成因。

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