阅读背景知识1-30.doc
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1、【精品文档】如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流阅读背景知识1-30.精品文档.1关于美国的历史 The continents first inhabitants walked into North America across what is now the Bering Strait from Asia. For the next 20,000 years these pioneering settlers were essentially left alone to develop distinct and dynamic cultures. In the modern US, th
2、eir descendants include the Pueblo people in what is now New Mexico; Apache in Texas; Navajo in Arizona, Colorado and Utah; Hopi in Arizona; Crow in Montana; Cherokee in North Carolina; and Mohawk and Iroquois in New York State. The Norwegian explorer Leif Eriksson was the first European to reach No
3、rth America, some 500 years before a disoriented Columbus accidentally discovered Indians in Hispaniola (now the Dominican Republic and Haiti) in 1492. By the mid-1550s, much of the Americas had been poked and prodded by a parade of explorers from Spain, Portugal, England and France. The first colon
4、ies attracted immigrants looking to get rich quickly and return home, but they were soon followed by migrants whose primary goal was to colonize. The Spanish founded the first permanent European settlement in St Augustine, Florida, in 1565; the French moved in on Maine in 1602, and Jamestown, Virgin
5、ia, became the first British settlement in 1607. The first Africans arrived as indentured(合同的,契约的) laborers with the Brits a year prior to English Puritan pilgrims escape of religious persecution(迫害). The pilgrims founded a colony at Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts, in 1620 and signed the famous Mayflo
6、wer Compact - a declaration of self-government that would later be echoed in the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution. British attempts to assert authority in its 13 North American colonies led to the French and Indian War (1757-63). The British were victorious but were left with a na
7、sty war debt, which they tried to recoup(赔偿,付还) by imposing new taxes. The rallying cry no taxation without representation united the colonies, who ceremoniously dumped caffeinated cargo overboard during the Boston Tea Party. Besieged British general Cornwallis surrendered to American commander Geor
8、ge Washington five years later at Yorktown, Virginia, in 1781. In the 19th century, Americas mantra was Manifest Destiny. A combination of land purchases, diplomacy and outright wars of conquest had by 1850 given the US roughly its present shape. In 1803, Napoleon dumped the entire Great Plains for
9、a pittance(微薄收入), and Spain chipped in with Florida in 1819. The Battle of the Alamo during the 1835 Texan Revolution paved the way for Texan independence from Mexico, and the war with Mexico (1846-48) secured most of the southwest, including California.The systematic annihilation(消灭,歼灭) of the buff
10、alo hunted by the Plains Indians, encroachment(侵犯) on their lands, and treaties not worth the paper they were written on led to Native Americans being herded into reservations, deprived of both their livelihoods and their spiritual connection to their land. Nineteenth-century immigration drastically
11、 altered the cultural landscape as settlers of predominantly British stock were joined by Central Europeans and Chinese, many attracted by the 1849 gold rush in California. The South remained firmly committed to an agrarian life heavily reliant on African American slave labor. Tensions were on the r
12、ise when abolitionist Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1860. The South seceded from(脱离) the Union, and the Civil War, by far the bloodiest war in Americas history, began the following year. The North prevailed(胜利) in 1865, freed the slaves and introduced universal adult male suffrage(选举权). L
13、incolns vision for reconstruction, however, died with his assassination. Americas trouncing of the Spaniards in 1898 marked the USAs ascendancy as a superpower and woke the country out of its isolationist slumber.The US still did its best not to get its feet dirty in WWIs trenches, but finally capit
14、ulated(停止抵抗,有条件投降) in 1917, sending over a million troops to help sort out the pesky(讨厌的,棘手的) Germans. Postwar celebrations were cut short by Prohibition in 1920, which banned alcohol in the country. The 1929 stock-market crash signaled the start of the Great Depression and eventually brought about
15、Franklin Roosevelts New Deal, which sought to lift the country back to prosperity. After the Japanese dropped in uninvited on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the US played a major role in defeating the Axis powers. Atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 not only ended the war with Japan, but u
16、shered in the nuclear age. The end of WWII segued into the Cold War - a period of great domestic prosperity and a surface uniformity belied by paranoia and betrayal. Politicians like Senator Joe McCarthy took advantage of the climate to fan anticommunist flames, while the USSR and USA stockpiled nuc
17、lear weapons and fought wars by proxy in Korea, Africa and Southeast Asia. Tensions between the two countries reached their peak in 1962 during the Cuban Missile Crisis.The 1960s was a decade of profound social change, thanks largely to the Civil Rights movement, Vietnam War protests and the discove
18、ry of sex, drugs and rock & roll. The Civil Rights movement gained momentum in 1955 with a bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama. As a nonviolent mass protest movement, it aimed at breaking down segregation and regaining the vote for disfranchised Southern blacks. The movement peaked in 1963 with Marti
19、n Luther King Jrs I have a dream speech in Washington, DC, and the passage of the landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act and 1965 Voting Rights Act. Meanwhile, Americas youth were rejecting the conformity of the previous decade, growing their hair long and smoking lots of dope. Tune in, turn on, drop out wa
20、s the mantra of a generation who protested heavily (and not disinterestedly) against the war in Vietnam. Assassinations of prominent political leaders - John and Robert Kennedy, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr - took a little gloss off the party, and the American troops mired in Vietnam took off
21、 the rest. NASAs moon landing in 1969 did little to restore national pride. In 1974 Richard Nixon became the first US president to resign from office, due to his involvement in the cover-up of the Watergate burglaries, bringing American patriotism to a new low.The 1970s and 80s were a period of tech
22、nological advancement and declining industrialism. Self image took a battering at the hands of Iranian Ayatollah Khomeni. A conservative backlash, symbolized by the election and popular two-term presidency of actor Ronald Reagan, sought to put some backbone in the country. The US then concentrated o
23、n bullying its poor neighbors in Central America and the Caribbean, meddling in the affairs of El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama and Grenada. The collapse of the Soviet Blocs Evil Empire in 1991 left the US as the worlds sole superpower, and the Gulf War in 1992 gave George Bush the opportunity to lead
24、 a coalition supposedly representing a new world order into battle against Iraq. Domestic matters, such as health reform, gun ownership, drugs, racial tension, gay rights, balancing the budget, the tenacious Whitewater scandal and the Monica Lewinsky Fornigate affair tended to overshadow internation
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