机经真题 7 Passage 1

纠错
置顶

The Fur Trade and Native Americans

纠错

Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. This question is worth 2 points. Drag your choices to the spaces where they belong. To review the passage, select View Passage.

Drag your answer choices to the spaces where they belong. To remove an answer choice, click on it.To review the passage, click VIEW TEXT.

Trade between Native Americans and European had lasting effects on Native American societies.

显示答案
正确答案: C D E
  • A.
    Trade between Native Americans and Europeans increased in part because some of the metal goods that Native Americans obtained through this trade increased their success as trappers.
  • B.
    When demand for furs was low, Native American nations supported their communities by trading meat, fish, fowl, or agricultural crops for European goods.
  • C.
    Under European influence, Native Americans developed new views about the roles of men and women and began placing less emphasis on the group's well-being and more on the individual's.
  • D.
    When local populations of animals became reduced because of the high demand for furs, Native Americans began trapping in distant areas, a practice that caused tension with members of other groups.
  • E.
    As Native Americans devoted less time to hunting and fishing and more time to trapping and trading, they became more dependent on trade with Europeans for the things they needed, including food.
  • F.
    Possession of European goods became a sign of high status within Native American groups, a development that strengthened existing Native American ideas about personal private property.

我的笔记 编辑笔记

  • 原文
  • 译文


  • Soon after Europeans made contact with the aboriginal peoples of North America, known as Native Americans, trading became the focus of European concern. French, British, and Dutch merchants sought animal furs, especially beaver skins, which were in high demand between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries in Europe for making men's hats. At the same time, Native Americans were superb hunters, but they did not possess metalworking technology as the Europeans did. Native Americans exchanged furs from America's abundant wildlife for iron, copper, and brass goods such as knives, axes, pots, and needles from the Europeans.



    Many Native Americans were willing, even enthusiastic, to trade for European goods. Over the centuries, participation in the fur trade increased in volume and in importance in aboriginal economies. The immediate consequence of trade was the addition of material and technological innovations, but dependence on trade had negative effects not foreseen by most participants. Since the market for beaver could not be controlled by Native American fur trappers, they were vulnerable to changes in demand. When demand was high they abandoned some aboriginal practices in order to keep pace. Instead of following traditional conservation principles, they excessively trapped nearby territories so that they could obtain as many animals as possible. This led to the rapid depletion of beaver in some areas. As a result, men were forced to travel farther from their communities to find the desired resource, often entering territories of other people who were similarly engaged in trapping and trading, resulting in conflict. When the demand for furs declined, people were left without the ability to procure the goods that they wanted. In societies where traditional craft skills had been abandoned once people acquired manufactured tools and utensils, the loss of European goods was difficult to adjust to or even contemplate.



    In addition to the acquisition of a wide range of imported goods, transformations in aboriginal societies included shifts in economic activities, changes in gender roles, the development of notions of private property in goods and especially in land, the emergence of or increases in social differences based on wealth, and the intensification of warfare caused by competition over access to resources and to trade routes. These transformations were manifested more intensely in some societies than in others, but they were prevalent throughout North America at different historical periods. These changes occurred earliest in regions of initial European entry and settlement, that is, along the eastern coasts and nearby inland territories, but they eventually spread to the interior of the continent, leaving no Native American nation untouched.



    As early as the seventeenth century in some eastern aboriginal nations, trapping and trading replaced hunting as men's central productive activities. Among agricultural people where farming was the responsibility of women food supplies were maintained, but among other groups that depended more heavily on meat, fish, and fowl brought in by hunters, aboriginal food resources were not exploited as fully as had been done prior to involvement in the fur trade. Many people then traded with Europeans for food, but this led to increased dependence on traders. Women, too, were involved in the fur trade because their labor was needed to prepare the pelts (animal skins) for the market. Since they also had to provide food for their families and perform household tasks, demands on their labor increased as well. As the economic roles of both men and women changed to place greater focus on the fur trade, people grew more dependent on the trade in order to supply their needs and wants. This reliance on trade tended to intensify and solidify the productive shifts that supported it.



    In addition, since European traders dealt with Native American trappers as individuals, a process began that eventually resulted in a reorientation of ideology away from kin-based, community-based mutual reliance and support to one that stressed individuals. Over the centuries, notions of personal private property developed that contrasted fundamentally with beliefs about communal ownership of resources. Although aboriginal societies had concepts of territorial rights, these rights were held by groups, not by individuals. Strangers in need were permitted to use local resources, at least temporarily, but the idea that ownership of land and resources could be transferred was foreign to Native American cultures.


  • 暂无译文

  • 官方解析
  • 网友贡献解析
  • 标签
    0 感谢 不懂
    解析

    A. 错误。虽然文章提到了原住民用毛皮换取金属制品,但并没有强调这些金属制品如何增加了他们作为捕兽人的成功率。这是对文章内容的过度推测。

    B. 错误。文章提到需求低时原住民面临的困难,但并没有具体说他们通过交易肉、鱼、禽或农作物来支持社区,这不是文章中的主要观点。

    C. 这正确反映了文章中提到的因为参与皮毛贸易,原住民对男女角色以及从集体利益转向个人主义的观念变化。

    D. 这正确反映了因为过度捕捉导致本地动物数量减少,原住民进入更远的地区捕捉动物,从而引发与其他群体成员紧张关系的现象。

    E. 这正确反映了随着原住民减少打猎和捕鱼时间,转而更多地从事捕捉和贸易,他们对从欧洲人那里获得所需物品的依赖性增加的现象。

    F. 错误。文章提到了私人财产观念的发展,但没有明确说明持有欧洲商品成为高地位的标志。这不是文章中的主要观点。

题目讨论

如果对题目有疑问,欢迎来提出你的问题,热心的小伙伴会帮你解答。

最新提问