问题 单项选择题

Rarely has there been as neat a fit between a book’s subject and its author’s biography as in "Bound Together: How Traders, Preachers, Adventurers, and Warriors Shaped Globalization" by Nayan Chanda. It’s easy to see why the subject fascinates Chanda; he’s a self-proclaimed Francophile(崇拜法国的人) of South Asian origin, who studied French in Calcutta, then took courses on China in Paris, ran a magazine in Hong Kong and ended up launching an online journal devoted to globalization at a venerable Ivy League institution. And in this engaging analysis, he answers such intriguing questions as" How did the coffee bean, first grown only in Ethiopia, end up in our coffee cups after a journey through Java and Colombia"

In examining these specific questions -- and larger ones about how the world is interconnected m Chanda does not emphasize his own experiences. But when appropriate, he effectively uses small, personal details to cut very big social, economic, cultural and sometimes biological processes down to size. He shows how close scrutiny of the iPod he gave his son as a birthday present can reveal much about the multinational origins of such objects. It was officially touted as" designed" by an American company and "assembled in China"; he found that it actually contained component parts and software with ties to India, Japan, South Korea and Scotland. And he marvels at the speed with which it traveled from Shanghai to New haven via Alaska and Indiana, as well as at his ability to track its progress thanks to bar codes.

The debate over globalization has grown so polarized that many readers are probably itching to know whether Chanda belongs in the" pro" or" anti" camp. One theme of "Bound Together" is that thinking in these terms doesn’t make sense. Those who gather at what are somewhat misleadingly called" anti- globalization" rallies, after all, don’t oppose all the ways the world is shrinking. And their campaigns make use of many technologies (notably the Internet) that are crucial to 21st-century-style globalization.

Indeed, Chanda’s stand on the subject might be called that of a cautiously optimistic fatalist. He asserts that the only reasonable response to globalization is twofold: accept that the world is not going to stop shrinking and figure out ways to maximize the positive and minimize the negative effects. He acknowledges the downsides of globalization (social inequities, the spread of new diseases and so on), yet argues that in many ways being "bound together" ever more tightly can ultimately be a good thing, benefiting more and more individuals and groups.

This is a book filled with fascinating information. Even readers who disagree with his claims will come away with a host of new facts to draw upon. They will also learn a lot about the history and deployment of the term globalization, to which Chanda devotes an excellent chapter. In addition, many will never look at an iPod in quite the same way again.

By the close scrutiny of the coffee bean and the iPod, Chanda wants to tell us ()

A. how traders, preachers, adventurers, and warriors shaped globalization

B. how globalization has grown so quickly and widely around the world

C. how the world is interconnected by examining these specific questions

D. how small details reflect the big social, economic, cultural globalization

答案

参考答案:C

解析:

本题为推理判断题。A项为本书的题目,涵盖范围过于广泛,不合题意。作者在第2段第1句话说明了列举这些例子的目的:通过细节反映世界联系的紧密。因此,本题应选择C。

完形填空
请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项题卡上将该项涂黑。
In eighteen thirty, only a few miles away from what is now the great city of Cincinnan,  Ohio, lay a   36 and almost endless forest.
The area had a few settlements   37  by people of the frontier. Many of them had already left the area for settlements further   39  the west. But among those   40  was a man who had been one of the first people to arrive there.
He lived alone in a house of logs surrounded   41 all sides by the great forest. He seemed a part of the darkness and   42  of the forest, for no one had   43  known him to smile or speak an unnecessary word. His simple needs were   44 by selling or trading the skins of wild animals in the town.
His little log house had a single door. Directly   45  was a window. The window was boarded up(堵住). No one could remember a(n)  46  when it was not. And no one knew why it had been   47 .  I imagine there are few people living today who ever knew the   48  of that window. But I am one, as you shall   49 .
The man's name was said to be Murlock. He   50  to be seventy years old, but he was really fifty. Something other than years had been the   51 of his aging.
His hair and long, full beard were white.  His gray,   52  eyes were sunken.  His face was wrinkled. He was tall and thin with drooping shoulders—like someone with many   53 .
I never saw him. These   54  I learned from my grandfather. He told me the man's story   55  I was a boy. He had known him when living nearby in that early day.
小题1:
A.hugeB.heavyC.smallD.bright
小题2:
A.discoveredB.createdC.establishedD.invented
小题3:
A.visitedB.reachedC.leftD.loved
小题4:
A.inB.forC.overD.to
小题5:
A.movingB.remainingC.travelingD.hunting
小题6:
A.alongB.byC.withD.on
小题7:
A.silenceB.noisesC.brightnessD.freshness
小题8:
A.neverB.everC.onceD.sometimes
小题9:
A.understoodB.exchangedC.satisfiedD.offered
小题10:
A.outsideB.insideC.beforeD.opposite
小题11:
A.timeB.opportunityC.storyD.experience
小题12:
A.openedB.closedC.destroyedD.protected
小题13:
A.secreetB.structureC.formationD.construction
小题14:
A.guessB.seeC.supposeD.feel
小题15:
A.seemedB.happenedC.pretendedD.appeared
小题16:
A.causeB.cureC.reasonD.affection
小题17:
A.prettyB.livelyC.lifelessD.horrible
小题18:
A.achievementsB.enemiesC.problemsD.dreams
小题19:
A.lessonsB.detailsC.summariesD.ideas
小题20:
A.becauseB.sinceC.whenD.although
判断题