机经真题 10 Passage 1

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China's Twelfth-Century Intellectual Influence on Ja...

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Paragraph 4 answers all of the following questions EXCEPT:

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  • A
    For what types of scholarship was the Sung period best known?
  • B
    Did printing play a role in the development of Sung scholarship?
  • C
    How did the technology used in Chinese printing influence Japanese printing methods?
  • D
    What was the social impact of the ownership of Chinese books during the period of Taira supremacy?
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正确答案: C

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  • Although Japan's official relations with China's Tang dynasty ended in the late ninth century, contacts with the continent were never completely severed, and throughout the tenth and eleventh centuries, private traders continued to operate out of Kyushu (western Japan), particularly the ancient port of Hakata. Moreover, the imperial court, even though it steadfastly refused to dispatch its own missions again to China, kept officials permanently stationed at a command post near Hakata to oversee the import trade and to requisition choice luxury goods for sale and distribution among aristocrats. And when the Taira warrior clan became influential in the western provinces in the twelfth century, they naturally took a keen interest in-and eventually monopolized-the highly profitable maritime trade with China. This trade would lead to a renewed influence of China on the intellectual life of Japan.



    China of the Sung dynasty (960-1279) was a changed country from the expansionist, cosmopolitan land of Tang times that the Japanese had so assiduously copied several centuries earlier. Yet despite political difficulties and territorial losses, the Sung was a time of great advancement in Chinese civilization. No doubt most of the developments of the Sung in art, religion, and philosophy would in time have been transmitted to Japan. But the fortuitous combination of desire on the part of the Sung to increase its foreign trade with Japan and the vigorous initiative taken in maritime activity by the Taira clan greatly speeded the process of transmission.



    One of the earliest and most important results of this new wave of cultural transmission from the continent was a revival of interest in Japan of pure scholarship. The imperial court at Nara, following the Chinese model, had founded a central college in the capital and directed that branch colleges be established in the various provinces. The ostensible purpose of this system of colleges, which by the mid-Nara period (710-784) had evolved a fourfold curriculum of Confucian classics, literature, law, and mathematics, was to provide a channel of advancement in the court bureaucracy for the sons of the lower (including the provincial) aristocracy. But in actual practice very little opportunity to advance was provided, and bestowal of courtier ranks and offices continued to be made almost entirely on grounds of birth. Before long, the college system languished, and the great courtier families assumed responsibility through private academies for the education of their own children. Moreover, as the courtiers of the early Heian period (794-1185) became increasingly infatuated with literature, they almost totally neglected the other fields of academic or scholarly pursuit. Courtier society offered little reward to the individual who, say, patiently acquired a profound knowledge of the works of Confucius; yet it liberally heaped laurels upon and promised literary immortality to the author of superior poems.



    The Sung period in China, on the other hand, was an exceptional age for scholarship, most notably perhaps in history and in the compilation of encyclopedias and catalogs of artworks. This scholarly activity was greatly facilitated by the development of printing, invented by the Chinese several centuries earlier. Indeed, Japanese visitors to Sung China were much impressed by the general availability of printed books on a great variety of subjects, including history, Buddhism, Confucianism, literature, medicine, and geography, and carried them in ever greater numbers back to Japan. By the time of the Taira supremacy, collections of Chinese books had become important status symbols among upper-class Japanese. The great Taira leader Kiyomori is said, for example, to have gone to extravagant lengths to obtain a 1,000-volume encyclopedia whose export was prohibited by the Sung. Some courtiers confided in their diaries that they had little or no personal interest in these books but nevertheless felt constrained to acquire them for the sake of appearances. Yet the Chinese books brought to Japan at this time, in the thousands and even in the tens of thousands, not only provided the basis for many new libraries but also motivated the Japanese to print their own books and to a great extent stimulated the varied and energetic scholarly activities of the coming medieval age.


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    解析

    【题型】否定事实信息题

    【答案】C

    【解析】

    A. 第四段提到宋代在历史学和编纂百科全书及艺术品目录方面尤为著名,因此这段内容回答了这个问题。

    B. 段落中明确提到印刷的发展大大促进了宋代的学术活动,这回答了印刷在宋代学术发展中起到的作用。

    C. 段落并未讨论中国印刷技术如何直接影响日本的印刷方法。因此C是正确答案。

    D. 段落中讨论了拥有中国书籍在平氏统治时期的重要社会影响,包括它们成为上层阶级日本人重要的地位象征,以及一些贵族为了外表而收集这些书籍的行为,从而回答了这个问题。

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