免費開始練習
hce_cmu 107年 英文

第 42 題

📖 題組:
In seeking to describe the origins of theater, one must rely primarily on speculation, since there is little concrete evidence on which to draw. The most widely accepted theory, championed by anthropologists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, envisions theater as emerging out of myth and ritual. The process perceived by these anthropologists may be summarized briefly. During the early stages of its development, a society becomes aware of forces that appear to influence or control its food supply and well-being. Having little understanding of natural causes, it attributes both desirable and undesirable occurrences to supernatural or magical forces, and it searches for means to win the favor of these forces. Perceiving an apparent connection between certain actions performed by the group and the result it desires, the group repeats, refines and formalizes those actions into fixed ceremonies, or rituals. Stories (myths) may then grow up around a ritual. Frequently the myths include representatives of those supernatural forces that the rites celebrate or hope to influence. Performers may wear costumes and masks to represent the mythical characters or supernatural forces in the rituals or in accompanying celebrations. As a people becomes more sophisticated, its conceptions of supernatural forces and causal relationships may change. As a result, it may abandon or modify some rites. But the myths that have grown up around the rites may continue as part of the group’s oral tradition and may even come to be acted out under conditions divorced from these rites. When this occurs, the first step has been taken toward theater as an autonomous activity, and thereafter entertainment and aesthetic values may gradually replace the former mystical and socially efficacious concerns. Although origin in ritual has long been the most popular, it is by no means the only theory about how the theater came into being. Storytelling has been proposed as one alternative. Under this theory, relating and listening to stories are seen as fundamental human pleasures. Thus, the recalling of an event (a hunt, battle, or other feat) is elaborated through the narrator’s pantomime and impersonation and eventually through each role being assumed by a different person. In addition to exploring the possible antecedents of theater, scholars have also theorized about the motives that led people to develop theater. Why did theater develop, and why was it valued after it ceased to fulfill the function of ritual? Most answers fall back on the theories about the human mind and basic human needs. One, set forth by Aristotle in the fourth century B.C.E., sees humans as naturally imitative—as taking pleasure in imitating persons, things, and actions and in seeing such imitations. Another, advanced in the twentieth century, suggests that humans have a gift for fantasy, through which they seek to reshape reality into more satisfying forms than those encountered in daily life. Thus, fantasy or fiction (of which drama is one form) permits people to objectify their anxieties and fears, confront them, and fulfill their hopes in fiction if not fact. The theater, then, is one tool whereby people define and understand their world or escape from unpleasant realities. But neither the human imitative instinct nor a penchant for fantasy by itself leads to an autonomous theater. Therefore, additional explanations are needed. One necessary condition seems to be a somewhat detached view of human problems. For example, one sign of this condition is the appearance of the comic vision, since comedy requires sufficient detachment to view some deviations from social norms as ridiculous rather than as serious threats to the welfare of the entire group. Another condition that contributes to the development of autonomous theater is the emergence of the aesthetic sense. For example, some early societies ceased to consider certain rites essential to their well-being and abandoned them; nevertheless, they retained as parts of their oral tradition the myths that had grown up around the rites and admired them for their artistic qualities rather than for their religious usefulness.
According to this article, some societies developed and repeated ceremonial actions in order to _____.
  • A consolidate members of the society
  • B ensure the society’s continuous prosperity
  • C help society better understand the supernatural forces
  • D distinguish their beliefs from those of other societies
  • E distribute the food supply in case of emergency

思路引導 VIP

請回想一下文章第二段:當早期社會的人們發現自己的『糧食供應與福祉』受到神祕力量控制時,他們採取行動的主要『最終目標』是什麼?是為了獲得知識上的解答,還是為了確保族群的生存與資源穩定呢?

🤖
AI 詳解 AI 專屬家教

恭喜你答對了!你能精準捕捉到文章第二段的細節,說明你具備優秀的資訊檢索與「換句話說」(paraphrasing)的能力,這在閱讀測驗中是非常關鍵的技巧。

儀式背後的生存動機

在文章第二段中,作者清楚描述了早期社會發展出儀式的邏輯:當時的人們意識到某些力量會影響他們的糧食供應(food supply)與福祉(well-being)。由於缺乏對自然因果的科學認知,他們將這些現象歸因於超自然力量,並試圖尋求「贏得這些力量青睞(win the favor of these forces)」的方法。選項 (B) 所提到的「確保社會持續繁榮(continuous prosperity)」,正是對文中追求穩定糧食與生活安定的最佳總結。

▼ 還有更多解析內容

🏷️ 相關主題

中美洲古文明的歷史文化與傳說解析
查看更多「英文」的主題分類考古題

📝 同份考卷的其他題目

查看 107年英文 全題