UnitAViewofMountains课文翻译综合教程四(共3页).docx
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1、精选优质文档-倾情为你奉上Unit 4 A View of MountainsJonathan Schell1. On August 9, 1945, the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, Yosuke Yamahata, a photographer serving in the Japanese army, was dispatched to the destroyed city. The hundred or so pictures he took the next day constitute the fullest phot
2、ographic record of nuclear destruction in existence. Hiroshima, destroyed three days earlier, had largely escaped the cameras lens in the first day after the bombing. It was therefore left to Yamahata to record, methodically and, as it happens, with a great and simple artistry the effects on a human
3、 population of a nuclear weapon only hours after it had been used. Some of Yamahatas pictures show corpses charred in the peculiar way in which a nuclear fireball chars its victims. They have been burned by light technically speaking, by the “thermal pulse” and their bodies are often branded with th
4、e patterns of their clothes, whose colors absorb light in different degrees. One photograph shows a horse twisted under the cart it had been pulling. Another shows a heap of something that once had been a human being hanging over a ledge into a ditch. A third shows a girl who has somehow survived un
5、wounded standing in the open mouth of a bomb shelter and smiling an unearthly smile, shocking us with the sight of ordinary life, which otherwise seems to have been left behind for good in the scenes we are witnessing. Stretching into the distance on all sides are fields of rubble dotted with fires,
6、 and, in the background, a view of mountains. We can see the mountains because the city is gone. That absence, even more than wreckage, contains the heart of the matter. The true measure of the event lies not in what remains but in all that has disappeared.2. It took a few seconds for the United Sta
7、tes to destroy Nagasaki with the worlds second atomic bomb, but it took fifty years for Yamahatas pictures of the event to make the journey back from Nagasaki to the United States. They were shown for the first time in this country in 1995, at the International Center for Photography in New York. Ar
8、riving a half-century late, they are still news. The photographs display the fate of a single city, but their meaning is universal, since, in our age of nuclear arms, what happened to Nagasaki can, in a flash, happen to any city in the world. In the photographs, Nagasaki comes into its own. Nagasaki
9、 has always been in the shadow of Hiroshima, as if the human imagination had stumbled to exhaustion in the wreckage of the first ruined city without reaching even the outskirts of the second. Yet the bombing of Nagasaki is in certain respects the fitter symbol of the nuclear danger that still hangs
10、over us. It is proof that, having once used nuclear weapons, we can use them again. It introduces the idea of a series the series that, with tens of thousands of nuclear weapons remaining in existence, continues to threaten everyone. (The unpredictable, open-ended character of the series is suggeste
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