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Question 6 of 6

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What can be inferred about the professor when he mentions critics of serial novels?

A. He thinks that critics do not appreciate the constraints that writers of that period were under

B. He believes that the criticisms do not apply to Dickens' work.

C. He agrees that Dickens' style was not well suited to the serial-publication format.

D. He is pleased that critics' arguments have been gaining the attention that they deserve.

我的答案 D 正确答案 B

本题用时21s
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    解析

    【题型】推断题(根据What can be inferred about判断)

    【思路分析】问当教授提到连载小说的评论家时,表明了什么;推断题本质就是细节题,根据原文讲述的内容选择即可,不要脑补,注意对应同义替换就好

    Now, um, for a long time. There have been people who have dismissed serial novels in general, saying the reason there are so many cliff hangers, suspenseful chapter endings and melodramatic moments in these novels is because a lot of authors started trying to build up their readership by leaving the audience hanging at the end of each installment. You know, so the people would rush out and buy the next month’s installment to find out what happened next.

    But for Dickens, at least, well, when you look more carefully at where the actual plot twists were in his works, really suspenseful sensational ones, these are not really at the ends of chapters. Instead, you'll see that he often uses something that we would today recognize as a cinematic effect. The installment might end with someone walking down the street, like in the movie, just walking off into the distance. So really, Dickens wasn't being at all crude or manipulative. He was much more subtle than that. He was clever enough to know how to keep his readers coming back, to see what happened next without the need for gross over dramatization.

    【选项分析】

    A ×: 他认为批评家们没有意识到那时候作者们遇到的限制,与原文相反,批评家们知道作者们是受到了连载小说形式的影响才在结尾留有悬念吸引读者继续购买和阅读,排除

    B ✔️: 上一段是说到对连载小说的批评,觉得小说家们是为了build readership,为了让读者继续买连载小说,才故意在结尾留有悬念,故意设置戏剧性桥段,这段转折提到Dickens说其悬念不是设置在结尾, 且结尾就是人物逐渐消失在远方,也不是戏剧性桥段,这与批评家们批评的点都不对应,所以选B

    C ×: 他同意Dickens的风格不是很适合连载形式,原文说了Dickens也很懂得如何吸引读者继续购买,说明他的小说很适合连载形式,排除

    D ×: 他很高兴批评家们的言论终于得到了足够的重视,原文说一直都有这样的批评声,没有说之前忽视了这样的言论,排除

    【题目难度】难

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译文

Listen to part of a lecture in an English literature class.(male professor) Before we start reading some of the classic English authors of the 19th century like, uh, Charles Dickens, I wanted to talk to you about how people in England access such novels, the novels were made available to people and why? So, let\'s talk about what it was generally like to buy some of this literature.First of all, the novels that are classics today were very expensive. In England, the retail price of one such novel was equivalent to or even greater than a worker’s wages for a week. One of the reasons was the way that novels were typically published in 3 volumes called triple deckers.So, if you were going to buy one novel by, say, Dickens, you\'d actually have to purchase three separate books. And yet writers had hundreds of thousands, if not millions of readers.So how did that work? Well, as you might have guessed, most people who read novels didn\'t actually buy the novels. They would get them from one of two different sources. First, there were lending libraries.Lending libraries in the 19th century England were commercial enterprises. You paid the library an annual fee. And that gave you the right to borrow books. The largest of these lending libraries was called Mudie’s.Mudie’s was a national company with branches in most of the major cities of England. The way it worked was: Mudie’s would buy hundreds, if not thousands of copies of books and would loan them out to their customers.And because Mudie’s had so many libraries, if Mudie’s bought a book, it was more or less guaranteed to make money for the publisher. And you can see how it would have been a good thing for Mudie’s to have the books broken up into three separate volumes.Because Mudie’s could, you know, lend one volume to someone and another to someone else. And so, they had 3, 3 times as much stock to distribute among their customers than if it was all bound up in one volume.And Mudie’s influenced the content of the novels. Uh…Mudie was a real person, C. E. Mudie, and he was extremely conservative.So, if there was any content in a novel that offended him, but he didn\'t like, he wouldn\'t put the book in his libraries. And this obviously affected how publishers chose which books to publish.All right, the other way that people had access to novels was through serials. Most of the books we consider famous works of the 19th century were first published in what we call serial publication form.That means they were published in magazines or newspapers over the course of about a year. Every week you\'d buy a magazine or a newspaper, and there\'d be another chapter from the book.This was a much less expensive way to buy literature. A version of this serial publication was actually invented by Dickens and his publishers. Instead of buying a magazine or newspaper with a lot of varied content in it, You\'d buy just that month\'s installment of the book, bound in a soft cover.So, it looked just like a magazine, but all it had was a few chapters of the book and a couple of illustrations and advertisements.Now, um, for a long time. There have been people who have dismissed serial novels in general, saying the reason there are so many cliff hangers, suspenseful chapter endings and melodramatic moments in these novels is because a lot of authors started trying to build up their readership by leaving the audience hanging at the end of each installment. You know, so the people would rush out and buy the next month’s installment to find out what happened next.But for Dickens, at least, well, when you look more carefully at where the actual plot twists were in his works, really suspenseful sensational ones, these are not really at the ends of chapters.Instead, you\'ll see that he often uses something that we would today recognize as a cinematic effect. The installment might end with someone walking down the street, like in the movie, just walking off into the distance.So really, Dickens wasn\'t being at all crude or manipulative. He was much more subtle than that. He was clever enough to know how to keep his readers coming back, to see what happened next without the need for gross over dramatization.