全国乙卷阅读理解D篇解析讲义高三英语一轮复习.docx
《全国乙卷阅读理解D篇解析讲义高三英语一轮复习.docx》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《全国乙卷阅读理解D篇解析讲义高三英语一轮复习.docx(8页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、If you want to tell the history of the whole world, a history that does not privilege one part of humanity, you cannot do it through texts alone, because only some of the world has ever had texts, while most of the world, for most of the timez has not. Writing is one of humanity s later achievements
2、, and until fairly recently even many literate (有文字的)societies recorded their concerns not only in writing but in things.Ideally a history would bring together texts and objects, and some chapters of this book are able to do just that, but in many cases we simply can, t. The clearest example of this
3、 between literate and non-literate history is perhaps the first conflict, at Botany Bay, between Captain Cook s voyage and the Australian Aboriginals. From the English side, we have scientific reports and the captain7 s record of that terrible day. From the Australian side, we have only a wooden shi
4、eld (盾)dropped by a man in flight after his first experience of gunshot. If we want to reconstruct what was actually going on that day, the shield must be questioned and interpreted as deeply and strictly as the written reports.In addition to the problem of miscomprehension from both sides, there ar
5、e victories accidentally or deliberately twisted, especially when only the victors know how to write. Those who are on the losing side often have only their things to tell their stories. The Caribbean Tainoz the Australian Aboriginals, the African people of Benin and the Incas, all of whom appear in
6、 this book, can speak to us now of their past achievements most powerfully through the objects they made: a history told through things gives them back a voice. When we consider contact (联系)between literate and non-literate societies such as these, all our first-hand accounts are necessarily twisted
7、, only one half of a dialogue. If we are to find the other half of that conversation, we have to read not just the texts, but the objects.32. What is the first paragraph mainly about?A. How past events should be . What humanity is concerned . Whether facts speak louder than . Why written language is
8、 reliable.33. What does the author indicate by mentioning Captain Cook in paragraph 2?A. His report was . He represented the local . He ruled over Botany . His record was one-sided.34. What does the underlined word convervatiorTin paragraph 3 refer to?A. . . . Society.35. Which of the following book
9、s is the text most likely selected from?A. How Maps Tell Stories of the Worlds. A Short History of AustraliaC. A History of the World in 100 Objects. How Art Works Tell Stories文章分析阅读理解中出现这种三大段式的文章,往往给人较大的阅读压力,因为并不像其 它文章那样,有相对较短的首段或尾段能帮助你迅速了解文章的主题。但是你要坚定 不移地贯彻高考阅读理解的三项原则:1 .所有高考阅读理解的CD篇,也就是说明文和议论文,主题
10、和主旨一定非常直接明确;2 .主题和主旨一定在文章的标题和首尾段中有所体现,要在首尾段中寻找前后呼应的关键信息;3、所有题目的正确选项一定与文章的主题和主旨有密切的关系。无论文章是什么呈现形式,以上三点在绝大多数文章里都是基本确定的。深呼吸,我们来看看文章的第一段,全段一共两句话。第一句虽然略长,但是重点非 常容易把握,去掉开头的如果、逗号后面的插入语、最后的因为,整个句 子的主干就是单独通过文字是做不到的。在文章里看到类似“你不能做某事”的信息 时,一定要立刻想到,作者要讲述的重点信息一定不会止步于否定,“你不能做某事”之 后一定会出现你能做某事,这就是所谓的不破不立、先破后立的写作逻辑。
11、not only . but (also).不但而且.的递进结构中,重点信息一定是but或but also后面的内容。于是我们就把握住了作者在第一段给出的文章主题一只靠文字是不够 的,还要有物品。读过第一段之后,如果你有把握文章主题和主旨的阅读理解解题思路,那么这个时候 就不会继续往下读第二段,而是会直接去扫一眼全文的结尾,通过结尾来反向验证第一段 主题的判断。在这篇文章里,这样做的好处是显而易见的,因为全文的最后一句话直接告 诉你”不仅要阅读文字,还要审视物品,你看到的not just. but.与第一段末尾 的信息直接呼应。到此为止,文章的主题可以100%确定了,配合文章里不断出现的历 史
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 全国 阅读 理解 解析 讲义 英语 一轮 复习
限制150内