太傻超级论坛's Archiver

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-6 23:33

Issue名人例子集锦(持续更新中……)

[size=6]Diana[/size]
G$M,QHl [color=Red]Beauty[/color]
;U'E h:iisa:S Pw0c Diana was beautiful, in a fresh-faced, English, outdoors-girl kind of way. She used her big blue eyes to their fullest advantage, melting the hearts of men and women through an expression of complete vulnerability. Diana's eyes, like those of Marilyn Monroe, contained an appeal directed not to any individual but to the world at large.}Lf*l*O o nd0v
[color=Red]Television and newspaper[/color]#u`p,U/L6^e&Y4si
Most of the people who worshipped her, who read every tidbit about her in the gossip press and hung up pictures of her in their rooms, were not social snobs. Like Princess Grace of Monaco, Diana was a celebrity royal. She was a movie star who never actually appeared in a movie; in a sense her whole life was a movie, a serial melodrama acted out in public, with every twist and turn of the plot reported to a world audience. Diana was astute enough to understand the power of television and the voracious British tabloid newspapers. And she consistently tried to use the mass media as a stage for projecting her image — as the wronged spouse, as the radiant society beauty, as the compassionate princess hugging AIDS patients and land-mine victims, and as the mourning princess crying at celebrity funerals.
'TD SC{#D However, like many celebrities before her, she found out that she couldn't turn the media on and off at will, as though they were a tap. They needed her to feed the public appetite for celebrity gossip, and she needed them for her public performance, but what she hadn't bargained for was that her melodrama ran on without breaks. Everything she said or did was fair copy. After deliberately making her private life public, she soon discovered there was nothing private left.
JA i:Y)}/M5yM(eiA [color=Red]Sacrificial[/color]G]n2Il%gS2Ps+Gg
Diana was a sacrificial symbol in several ways. First she became the patron saint of victims, the sick, the discriminated against, the homeless. Then, partly through her real suffering at the hands of a rigidly formal family trained to play rigidly formal public roles, and partly through her shrewd manipulation of the press, Diana herself projected a compelling image of victimhood. Women in unhappy marriages identified with her; so did outsiders of one kind or another, ethnic, sexual or social. Like many religious idols, she was openly abused and ridiculed, in her case by the same press that stoked the public worship of her. And finally she became the ultimate victim of her own fame: pursued by paparazzi, she became a twisted and battered body in a limousine. It was a fittingly tawdry end to what had become an increasingly tawdry melodrama. But it is in the nature of religion that forms change to fit the times. Diana — celebrity, tabloid princess, mater dolorosa of the pop and fashion scene — was, if nothing else, the perfect idol for our times.GQ4dV2O{#|l
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[[i] 本帖最后由 myown5891 于 2006-8-7 08:34 编辑 [/i]]

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-7 09:01

Helen Keller

[color=Red][size=2]Blind and deaf[/size][/color]
g:IDas V Helen Keller was less than two years old when she came down with a fever. It struck dramatically and left her unconscious. The fever went just as suddenly. But she was blinded and, very soon after, deaf.
T6ruu,Lf [color=Red]Literature[/color]
pwQE#I5V I can say the word see. I can speak the language of the sighted. That's part of the first great achievement of Helen Keller. She proved how language could liberate the blind and the deaf. She wrote, "Literature is my utopia. Here I am not disenfranchised." But how she struggled to master language. With language, Keller, who could not hear and could not see, proved she could communicate in the world of sight and sound — and was able to speak to it and live in it.
|"@w1xHu [color=Red]Teacher[/color]}'n7y3Wl
As miraculous as learning language may seem, that achievement of Keller's belongs to the 19th century. It was also a co-production with her patient and persevering teacher, Anne Sullivan. Helen Keller's greater achievement came after Sullivan, her companion and protector, died in 1936. Keller would live 32 more years and in that time would prove that the disabled can be independent.
+o8}-MTL.C;uH [color=Red]Equal[/color]T#a A(Dafo}u
Those people whose only experience of her is "The Miracle Worker" will be surprised to discover her many dimensions. "My work for the blind," she wrote, "has never occupied a center in my personality. My sympathies are with all who struggle for justice." She was a tireless activist for racial and sexual equality.

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-7 09:24

Bruce Lee

[color=Red]Martial Arts[/color]9\4]?'^0|T;^U
He is the patron saint of the cult of the body: the almost mystical belief that we have the power to overcome adversity if only we submit to the right combinations of exercise, diet, meditation and weight training; that by force of will, we can sculpt ourselves into demigods. The century began with a crazy burst of that philosophy.

tesolchina 发表于 2006-8-7 09:28

谢谢  以人为单位收集证据是正途   最好看看适合哪些题目

zhangyang51win 发表于 2006-8-8 21:35

you did a good job

think you!

coolcat9885 发表于 2006-8-9 00:23

还有没有更多人的?谢谢了

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-10 10:29

[quote]原帖由 [i]tesolchina[/i] 于 2006-8-7 09:28 发表%Xe-}$MJR
谢谢  以人为单位收集证据是正途   最好看看适合哪些题目 [/quote]
(Q;Xn,J/d3M4aga,UR8J@ 谢谢版主的提醒,等把例子归集完,我一定找对应题目。

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-10 11:15

Adolf Hitler

[color=Red]History[/color]
5X:M"rzd5Uf3X3}3X The Satan and exterminating angel feared and hated by all others, Hitler led his people to a shameful defeat without precedent. That his political and strategic ambitions have created a dividing line in the history of this turbulent and tormented century is undeniable: there is a before and an after. By the breadth of his crimes, which have attained a quasi-ontological dimension, he surpasses all his predecessors: as a result of Hitler, man is defined by what makes him inhuman. With Hitler at the head of a gigantic laboratory, life itself seems to have changed.(x|9b W7f`.V HDo j
[color=Red]Leadership[/color]sD*Pw5m
Was there no resistance to his disastrous projects? There was. But it was too feeble, too weak and too late to succeed. German society had rallied behind him: the judicial, the educational, the industrial and the economic establishments gave him their support. Few politicians of this century have aroused, in their lifetime, such love and so much hate; few have inspired so much historical and psychological research after their death. Even today, works on his enigmatic personality and his cursed career are best sellers everywhere. Some are good, others are less good, but all seem to respond to an authentic curiosity on the part of a public haunted by memory and the desire to understand.Z'xoe7nQx
[color=Red]The apple of Paris[/color]9[Z3M1sn
We think we know everything about the nefarious forces that shaped his destiny: his unhappy childhood, his frustrated adolescence; his artistic disappointments; his wound received on the front during World War I; his taste for spectacle, his constant disdain for social and military aristocracies; his relationship with Eva Braun, who adored him; the cult of the very death he feared; his lack of scruples with regard to his former comrades of the SA, whom he had assassinated in 1934; his endless hatred of Jews, whose survival enraged him — each and every phase of his official and private life has found its chroniclers, its biographers.

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-10 11:37

Marilyn Monroe

[color=Red]Movie[/color](ZU,]V$mQ i
Movies have lent the most perishable qualities, such as youth, beauty and comedy, a millennial shelf life. Until the cameras rolled, stars of the past could only be remembered, not experienced. Had she been born earlier, Marilyn might have existed as only a legendary rumor, a Helen of Troy or Tinker Bell. But thanks to Blockbuster, every generation now has immediate access to the evanescent perfection of Marilyn bumping and cooing her way through that chorine's anthem, Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend, in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Only movie stars have the chance to live possibly forever, and maybe that's why they're all so crazy.#A/ej\ ysv M

.ATr5{ A B|G [[i] 本帖最后由 myown5891 于 2006-8-10 18:14 编辑 [/i]]

kelli_toefl 发表于 2006-8-10 13:00

恩,关注:)

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-10 18:12

The Beatles

[color=Red]Gift[/color]Gr] r^MIxc3Y&X
Looking back, though, it seems likely that the Beatles — with their buoyant spirits, their bottomless charm, their unaccustomed and irrepressible wit — could probably have boosted the mirth quotient at a clown convention. Their overflowing gifts for songcraft, harmony and instrumental excitement, their spiffy suits and nifty haircuts, their bright quips and ready smiles, made them appear almost otherworldly, as if they had just beamed down from some distant and far happier planet.
kSL+]m!v7| [color=Red]Hardships[/color]
5XU;^ pX~q:f Actually, of course, they hailed from Liverpool, a semi-grim seaport on the northwestern coast of England. John Lennon, born there in 1940, never knew the seagoing father who had deserted his mother; mainly a doting aunt raised the boy. He grew up arty and angry — and musical, it turned out, after his mother bought him the traditional cheap kid guitar (the label inside said guaranteed not to split), and he quickly worked out the chords to the Buddy Holly hit That'll Be the Day. Paul McCartney, born in 1942 and destined to become Lennon's songwriting soul mate, seemed a sunnier type: well mannered, level-headed, all that. But he had weathered trauma of his own, losing his mother to breast cancer in his early teens.
n^HZ;o W+g1T7gt2M8]
[[i] 本帖最后由 myown5891 于 2006-8-10 18:14 编辑 [/i]]

-Natalie- 发表于 2006-8-10 18:20

哇都是些很棒的例子阿。。。

bladekiller 发表于 2006-8-11 18:37

好东西,顶上去!!!

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-21 09:35

Muhammad Ali

[color=Red]Every profession is great that is greatly pursued[/color]-Q S#MPw}c ~
Oliver Wendell Holmes once observed that every profession is great that is greatly pursued. Boxing in the early '60s, largely controlled by the Mob, was in a moribund state until Muhammad Ali — Cassius Clay, in those days — appeared on the scene. "Just when the sweet science appears to lie like a painted ship upon a painted ocean," wrote A.J. Liebling, "a new Hero...comes along like a Moran tug to pull it out of the ocean."
~5K8\/VO:}6b`
Y*v)U\/VnX? [color=Red]Special[/color]
t~0B2myC`z Nor did they approve of his personal behavior: the self-promotions ("I am the greatest!"), his affiliation with the Muslims and giving up his "slave name" for Muhammad Ali ("I don't have to be what you want me to be; I'm free to be what I want"), the poetry (his ability to compose rhymes on the run could very well qualify him as the first rapper) or the quips ("If Ali says a mosquito can pull a plow, don't ask how. Hitch him up!"). At the press conferences, the reporters were sullen. Ali would turn on them. "Why ain't you taking notice?" or "Why ain't you laughing?" 0Ll V Wj#d[0u
[color=Red]
$Cd'?uXY*s:E'~ Bear no ill will[/color]
!df#X/@6L Then, of course, three years after Ali defended the championship, there came the public vilification for his refusal to join the Army during the Vietnam War — "I ain't got no quarrel with them Viet Cong" — one of the more telling remarks of the era. The government prosecuted him for draft dodging, and the boxing commissions took away his license. He was idle for 3 1/2 years at the peak of his career. In 1971 the Supreme Court ruled that the government had acted improperly. But Ali bore the commissions no ill will. There were no lawsuits to get his title back through the courts. No need, he said, to punish them for doing what they thought was right. Quite properly, in his mind, he won back the title in the ring, knocking out George Foreman in the eighth round of their fight in Zaire — the "Rumble in the Jungle."
'L8R4O3{ Z2d zZ #_\"Sj i\N.Z+q(x
[color=Red]Sport[/color]
aS!OIi)ho Ali was asked on a television show what he would have done with his life, given a choice. After an awkward pause — a rare thing, indeed — he admitted he couldn't think of anything other than boxing. That is all he had ever wanted or wished for. He couldn't imagine anything else. He defended boxing as a sport: "You don't have to be hit in boxing. People don't understand that." lu-OC7vn0QV2y"W N
[color=Red]
8s.O.A TF!J5P Spirit[/color]\aU_9d;x6l2p
Muhammad Ali's was not exactly a leave-taking, but it may have seemed so to the estimated 3 billion or so television viewers who saw him open the Atlanta Olympics in 1996. Outfitted in a white gym suit that eerily made him seem to glisten against a dark night sky, he approached the unlit saucer with his flaming torch, his free arm trembling visibly from the effects of Parkinson's./M t7jtg
:Q;iE+E'B` h5?
[color=Red]Marvel[/color]
1K\$v2y-g;e!x It was a kind of epiphany that those who watched realized how much they missed him and how much he had contributed to the world of sport. Students of boxing will pore over the trio of Ali-Frazier fights, which rank among the greatest in fistic history, as one might read three acts of a great drama. They would remember the shenanigans, the Ali Shuffle, the Rope-a-Dope, the fact that Ali had brought beauty and grace to the most uncompromising of sports. And they would marvel that through the wonderful excesses of skill and character, he had become the most famous athlete, indeed, the best-known personage in the world.

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-21 09:54

The American G.I.

The American G.I.
ev'S6N b"E6G3o1qv Y [color=Red]Hero[/color]T~ X*vL.HA$Vd1S
G.I. is a World War II term that two generations later continues to conjure up the warmest and proudest memories of a noble war that pitted pure good against pure evil — and good triumphed. The victors in that war were the American G.I.s, the Willies and Joes, the farmer from Iowa and the steelworker from Pittsburgh who stepped off a landing craft into the hell of Omaha Beach. The G.I. was the wisecracking kid Marine from Brooklyn who clawed his way up a deadly hill on a Pacific island. He was a black fighter pilot escorting white bomber pilots over Italy and Germany, proving that skin color had nothing to do with skill or courage. He was a native Japanese-American infantryman released from his own country's concentration camp to join the fight. She was a nurse relieving the agony of a dying teenager. He was a petty officer standing on the edge of a heaving aircraft carrier with two signal paddles in his hands, helping guide a dive-bomber pilot back onto the deck. -Ljh'N+nBtCh
[color=Red]/~"mni.p)A?\
America[/color]e \O2` Y@ y A
They were America. They reflected our diverse origins. They were the embodiment of the American spirit of courage and dedication. They were truly a "people's army," going forth on a crusade to save democracy and freedom, to defeat tyrants, to save oppressed peoples and to make their families proud of them. They were the Private Ryans, and they stood firm in the thin red line.
@;A \b6y#~3a!p *q%G V9pnd"[~
[color=Red]Adventure[/color]l-U0m4X |)R(F/t"T
For most of those G.I.s, World War II was the adventure of their lifetime. Nothing they would ever do in the future would match their experiences as the warriors of democracy, saving the world from its own insanity. You can still see them in every Fourth of July color guard, their gait faltering but ever proud.
1X"@l;yW!]%j*Nl
pU#e)vJ9z [color=Red]America’s commitment[/color]
5F.j*_x7C'w$Y"y3@P Their forebears went by other names: doughboys, Yanks, buffalo soldiers, Johnny Reb, Rough Riders. But "G.I." will be forever lodged in the consciousness of our nation to apply to them all. The G.I. carried the value system of the American people. The G.I.s were the surest guarantee of America's commitment. For more than 200 years, they answered the call to fight the nation's battles. They never went forth as mercenaries on the road to conquest. They went forth as reluctant warriors, as citizen soldiers.
Ey d0j9_.At7Q Zo'~!v Bc'A^;E
[color=Red]Democracy[/color]A7TT*T]~,tEl
In this century hundreds of thousands of G.I.s died to bring to the beginning of the 21st century the victory of democracy as the ascendant political system on the face of the earth. The G.I.s were willing to travel far away and give their lives, if necessary, to secure the rights and freedoms of others. Only a nation such as ours, based on a firm moral foundation, could make such a request of its citizens. And the G.I.s wanted nothing more than to get the job done and then return home safely. All they asked for in repayment from those they freed was the opportunity to help them become part of the world of democracy--and just enough land to bury their fallen comrades, beneath simple white crosses and Stars of David.
%fCHV0?-u C
"E\L M6lz3y2^ [[i] 本帖最后由 myown5891 于 2006-8-21 11:15 编辑 [/i]]

myown5891 发表于 2006-8-21 13:10

Albert Einstein

[color=Red]Genius[/color]
[+dK&K!C1N_)]Z-b Einstein's galvanizing effect on the popular imagination continued throughout his life, and after it. Fearful his grave would become a magnet for curiosity seekers, Einstein's executors secretly scattered his ashes. But they were defeated at least in part by a pathologist who carried off his brain in hopes of learning the secrets of his genius. Only recently Canadian researchers, probing those pickled remains, found that he had an unusually large inferior parietal lobe — a center of mathematical thought and spatial imagery — and shorter connections between the frontal and temporal lobes. More definitive insights, though, are emerging from old Einstein letters and papers. These are finally coming to light after years of resistance by executors eager to shield the great relativist's image.
.b$W{Y+[*A}D
6zyE hJ { B Z%l7m [color=Red]Contrast[/color]
D#@/i0ck Unlike the avuncular caricature of his later years who left his hair unshorn, helped little girls with their math homework and was a soft touch for almost any worthy cause, Einstein is emerging from these documents as a man whose unsettled private life contrasts sharply with his serene contemplation of the universe. He could be alternately warmhearted and cold; a doting father, yet aloof; an understanding, if difficult, mate, but also an egregious flirt. "Deeply and passionately [concerned] with the fate of every stranger," wrote his friend and biographer Philipp Frank, he "immediately withdrew into his shell" when relations became intimate.
v)rN8V%^iZ
&{D@rP4M5\b{ [color=Red]Parents[/color]5fOf#nU` FNG
The pudgy first child of a bourgeois Jewish couple from southern Germany, he was strongly influenced by his domineering, musically inclined mother, who encouraged his passion for the violin and such classical composers as Bach, Mozart and Schubert. In his preteens he had a brief, intense religious experience, going so far as to chide his assimilated family for eating pork. But this fervor burned itself out, replaced, after he began exploring introductory science texts and his "holy" little geometry book, by a lifelong suspicion of all authority. ]e~'i [ y,_X0} t$o*I2T
His easygoing engineer father, an unsuccessful entrepreneur in the emerging electrochemical industry, had less influence, though it was he who gave Einstein the celebrated toy compass that inspired his first "thought experiment": what, the five-year-old wondered, made the needle always point north? llRWuZ

:QOO(DL]d%P [color=Red]Knowledge[/color]%cM{0~8D2\&t
The recognition of the practical power of his ideas coincided with a time when such power was most needed. Einstein came to America in 1933 as the most celebrated of a distinguished group of European intellectuals, refugees from Hitler and Mussolini, who, as soon as they arrived, changed the composition of university faculties (largely from patrician to Jewish), and who also changed the composition of government. Until F.D.R.'s New Deal, the country had never associated the contemplative life with governmental action. Now there was a Brain Trust; being an "egghead" was useful, admirable, even sexy. One saw that it was possible to outthink the enemy. Einstein wrote a letter to Roosevelt urging the making of a uranium bomb, and soon a coterie of can-do intellectuals convened at Los Alamos to become the new cowboys of war machinery. Presidents have relied on eggheads ever since: Einstein begat Kissinger begat Rubin, Reich and Greenspan.
'Hm&hOxP S
~}.O{H d;Y [color=Red]Relativity[/color]
q9M&i-~"S:{ Einstein became the emblem not only of the desire to know the truth but also of the capacity to know the truth. In his 1993 novel, Einstein's Dreams, Alan Lightman writes, "In this world time is a visible dimension. Just as one may look off in the distance and see houses, trees, mountain peaks that are landmarks in space, so one may look out in another direction and see births, marriages, deaths that are signposts in time, stretching off dimly into the far future." It does not take much of another stretch to attach godhead to such a vision, though that was hardly Einstein's own feeling.
Y"B%pU@ pTq;b'wL2k
[color=Red]Imagination[/color]
cGG8_sx-n@ Why, finally, is he so important to the age? Not because he personified brainpower — not because he was "an Einstein" — but rather because he demonstrated that the imagination is capable of coming to terms with experience. Simply by gazing into existence, he concluded that time and space could be warped, that mass and energy were interchangeable. He understood that the world was a puzzle created for deciphering and, more, that a person's place in the order of things was to solve as much of the puzzle as possible. This is what makes a human human; this, and the governing elements of morals and humor.

希罗 发表于 2006-8-21 15:25

up~~

飞奔的 发表于 2006-8-21 17:48

赞!!!!!!

kenf 发表于 2006-8-21 20:58

太感谢了,zan~~~~~~~~

robin945 发表于 2006-8-21 21:37

haotie!!!ding!!!

onin 发表于 2006-8-21 21:57

强顶!多好的东东阿

ganyuan 发表于 2006-8-22 01:38

太好了

急用中!!!!!!11

supersunxiang 发表于 2006-8-22 08:10

hao!!!

sarah0310 发表于 2006-8-23 12:55

好东东,要是有可以下载全部例子的文档就好了:)

myown5891 发表于 2006-9-16 23:37

Billy Graham

Religion1KPk-CB(@4_.`Y
Indeed, for at least 40 years, Graham has been the Pope of Protestant America (if Protestant is still the right word). Graham's finest moment may have been when he appeared at President Bush's side, Bible in hand, as we commenced our war against Iraq in 1991. The great revivalist's presence symbolized that the Gulf crusade was, if not Christian, at least biblical. Bush was not unique among our Presidents in displaying Graham. Eisenhower and Kennedy began the tradition of consulting the evangelist, but Johnson, Nixon and Ford intensified the fashion that concluded with Bush's naming him "America's pastor." President Clinton has increasingly preferred the Rev. Jesse Jackson, but the aura of apostle still hovers around Billy Graham.Zc+ufVj
He is an icon essential to a country in which, for two centuries now, religion has been not the opiate but the poetry of the people. In the U.S., 96 percent of us believe in God, 90 percent pray, and 90 percent believe God loves them, according to Gallup polls. Graham is totally representative of American religious universalism.
-f$t3A6F#y$M2I
j3a`]&Flv,T Peace
TWrU&] A6{$P#E0h That is now a period piece, but I think it is important to keep it on the record. Graham, a slow but sure learner, moved with the spirit of the age, and in the 1980s he became a preacher of world peace, urging reconciliation with Russia and China, where his wife Ruth, the daughter of missionaries, was born. Angry Fundamentalists turned against him, a move that became an anti-Graham passion when he rejected the program of the Christian right: "I don't think Jesus or the Apostles took sides in the political arenas of their day." The break between Graham and the Christian right became absolute when he denounced the violence of the antiabortion group Operation Rescue. "The tactics," Graham declared, "ought to be prayer and discussion."
}"w2K*LR.C;z9E
e+@tN^H$L| Faith6ye]!T Nb\sT
Though Graham has never, to my knowledge, spoken out on behalf of the poor, it seems legitimate to conclude that his almost exclusive emphasis upon soul saving is his passionate center, even his authentic obsession. And there, whatever his inadequacies of intellect or of spiritual discernment, Graham has ministered to a particular American need: the public testimony of faith. He is the recognized leader of what continues to call itself American evangelical Protestantism, and his life and activities have sustained the self-respect of that vast entity. If there is an indigenous American religion — and I think there is, quite distinct from European Protestantism — then Graham remains its prime emblem.

myown5891 发表于 2006-9-16 23:39

Che Guevara

Hero
B Q.P)s?$BJ/Q Gone is the generous Che who tended wounded enemy soldiers, gone is the vulnerable warrior who wanted to curtail his love of life lest it make him less effective in combat and gone also is the darker, more turbulent Che who signed orders to execute prisoners in Cuban jails without a fair trial."y9L)a9T2p
-}ha(E @(J'^
Follower2H;a7V j'_8q3Z
Thousands of luminous young men, particularly in Latin America, followed his example into the hills and were slaughtered there or tortured to death in sad city cellars, never knowing that their dreams of total liberation, like those of Che, would not come true.p cK,l&Kt,x n

\ v1[ cH0j J WitcheryQ Z{5o-O,}
To those who will never follow in his footsteps, submerged as they are in a world of cynicism, self-interest and frantic consumption, nothing could be more vicariously gratifying than Che's disdain for material comfort and everyday desires. One might suggest that it is Che's distance, the apparent impossibility of duplicating his life anymore, that makes him so attractive./R$l/~8|]WCu`uh#D

k| }CX(W b Terrifying
| Y%eW-pC] More than 3 billion human beings on this planet right now live on less than $2 a day. And every day that breaks, 40,000 children — more than one every second! — succumb to diseases linked to chronic hunger. They are there, always there, the terrifying conditions of injustice and inequality that led Che many decades ago to start his journey toward that bullet and that photo awaiting him in Bolivia.

myown5891 发表于 2006-9-16 23:41

Anne Frank

Book
(@,KZZO h|1X Along with everything else she came to represent, Anne Frank symbolized the power of a book. All the same, the Book of Anne has inspired a panoply of responses — plays, movies, documentaries, biographies, a critical edition of the diary — all in the service of understanding or imagining the girl or, in some cases, of putting her down.5g~M/gh7c a1Ht"d
The reason for her immortality was basically literary. She was an extraordinarily good writer, for any age, and the quality of her work seemed a direct result of a ruthlessly honest disposition. Millions were moved by the purified version of her diary originally published by her father, but the recent critical, unexpurgated edition has moved millions more by disanointing her solely as an emblem of innocence. Anne's deep effect on readers comes from her being a normal, if gifted, teenager. She was curious about sex, doubtful about religion, caustic about her parents, irritable especially to herself; she believed she had been fitted with two contradictory souls.
$hG CbDVE,} Readers enjoy quoting the diary's sweetest line — "I still believe, in spite of everything, that people are still truly good at heart" — -but the passage that follows is more revealing: "I simply can't build up my hopes on a foundation consisting of confusion, misery and death. I see the world gradually being turned into a wilderness; I hear the ever approaching thunder, which will destroy us too; I can feel the sufferings of millions; and yet, if I look up into the heavens, I think that it will all come right, that this cruelty will end, and that peace and tranquillity will return again ... I must uphold my ideals, for perhaps the time will come when I shall be able to carry them out."
C9K:Fb#K%J"GX2h 'VQQpO9Pw6j"a
&ZwE+kRx
Holocaust
S&d AN7r When the Nazis invaded Holland, the Frank family, like all Jewish residents, became victims of a systematically constricting universe. First came laws that forbade Jews to enter into business contracts. Then books by Jews were burned. Then there were the so-called Aryan laws, affecting intermarriage. Then Jews were barred from parks, beaches, movies, libraries. By 1942 they had to wear yellow stars stitched to their outer garments. Then phone service was denied them, then bicycles. Trapped at last in their homes, they were "disappeared."2r f&C\~AjU g!s
)Bv:]*[mh
Good and Evil
x \h A9m\:I#H_$SK Here is no childish optimism but rather a declaration of principles, a way of dealing practically with a world bent on destroying her. It is the cry of the Jew in the attic, but it is also the cry of the 20th century mind, of the refugee forced to wander in deserts of someone else's manufacture, of the invisible man who asserts his visibility.1Suz2U`ep&c?
cC^OR7~(N.Cv
Moral
$F!x6]?1f l Indeed, they love her, which is to say they love the book. In her diary she showed the world not only how fine a person she was, but also how necessary it is to come to terms with one's own moral being, even — perhaps especially — when the context is horror. The diary suggests that the story of oneself is all that we have, and that it is worth a life to get it right.

hey_maggie 发表于 2006-9-17 09:40

::86

KFU 发表于 2006-9-18 09:34

支持!!!!!!!!!

chemyue 发表于 2006-10-9 11:51

谢谢!关注中~~

littlegrass111 发表于 2006-10-11 10:54

up,up

boons 发表于 2006-10-14 16:32

不错,关注中

gxadai 发表于 2006-10-19 11:11

支持,关注!

54824693 发表于 2006-10-20 16:15

thanks for your sharing , god bless you.

yavi 发表于 2006-10-24 09:27

thanks!!

liuyongmin326 发表于 2006-10-24 20:31

真的很不错啊!!!谢谢了~~~~辛苦辛苦

cutemimi 发表于 2006-10-26 19:56

very good!

good!

hjacky 发表于 2006-10-28 23:46

::p7 ::p7 ::p7 ::p7 ::p7 ::p7

tobyzhang 发表于 2006-10-31 14:24

谢谢,很不错的说

stupidbaby 发表于 2006-11-1 23:43

[size=4][b]well done! perfect!![/b][/size]

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