GMAT考試閱讀資料(五)(6)

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    Passage 28
    The settlement of the United States has occupiedtraditional historians since 1893 when Frederick JacksonTurner developed his Frontier Thesis, a thesis thatexplained American development in terms of westward(5) expansion. From the perspective of women‘s history,Turner’s exclusively masculine assumptions constitute amajor drawback: his defenders and critics alike havereconstructed men‘s, not women’s, lives on the frontier.However, precisely because of this masculine orientation,(10)revising the Frontier Thesis by focusing on women‘sexperience introduces new themes into women’shistory-woman as lawmaker and entrepreneur-and,consequently, new interpretations of women‘s relation-ship to capital, labor, and statute.
    (15)Turner claimed that the frontier produced the indivi-dualism that is the hallmark of American culture, andthat this individualism in turn promoted democraticinstitutions and economic equality. He argued for thefrontier as an agent of social change. Most novelists and(20) historians writing in the early to midtwentieth centurywho considered women in the West, when they consid-ered women at all, fell under Turner‘s spell. In theirworks these authors tended to glorify women’s contribu-tions to frontier life. Western women, in Turnerian tradi-(25) tion, were a fiercely independent, capable, and durablelot, free from the constraints binding their eastern sisters.This interpretation implied that the West provided acongenial environment where women could aspire totheir own goals, free from constrictive stereotypes and(30) sexist attitudes. In Turnerian terminology, the frontierhad furnished “a gate of escape from the bondage of thepast.”
    By the middle of the twentieth century, the Frontier Thesis fell into disfavor among historians. Later, Reac-(35) tionist writers took the view that frontier women were lonely, displaced persons in a hostile milieu that intensi- fied the worst aspects of gender relations. The renais- sance of the feminist movement during the 1970‘s led to the Stasist school, which sidestepped the good bad(40) dichotomy and argued that frontier women lived livessimilar to the live of women in the East. In one now-standard text, Faragher demonstrated the persistence ofthe “cult of true womanhood” and the illusionary qual-ity of change on the westward journey. Recently the(45) Stasist position has been revised but not entirely discounted by new research.
    1. The primary purpose of the passage is to
    (A) provide a framework within which the history ofwomen in nineteenth-century America can beorganized.
    (B) discuss divergent interpretations of women‘s experience on the western frontier
    (C) introduce a new hypothesis about women‘s experience in nineteenth-century America
    (D) advocate an empirical approach to women‘s experience on the western frontier
    (E) resolve ambiguities in several theories about women‘s experience on the western frontier
    2. Which of the following can be inferred about the novelists and historians mentioned in lines 19-20?
    (A) They misunderstood the powerful influence of constrictive stereotypes on women in the East.
    (B) They assumed that the frontier had offered more opportunities to women than had the East.
    (C) They included accurate information about women‘s experiences on the frontier.
    (D) They underestimated the endurance and fortitude of frontier women.
    (E) They agreed with some of Turner‘s assumptions about frontier women, but disagreed with other assumptions that he made.
    3. Which of the following, if true, would provideadditional evidence for the Stasists‘ argument as it isdescribed in the passage?
    (A) Frontier women relied on smaller support groups of relatives and friends in the West than they had in the East.
    (B) The urban frontier in the West offered more occupational opportunity than the agricultural frontier offered.
    (C) Women participated more fully in the economic decisions of the family group in the West than they had in the East.
    (D) Western women received financial compensation for labor that was comparable to what women received in the East.
    (E) Western women did not have an effect on divorce laws, but lawmakers in the West were moreresponsive to women‘s concerns than lawmakers inthe East were.
    4. According to the passage, Turner makes which of thefollowing connections in his Frontier Thesis?
    Ⅰ. A connection between American individualism andeconomic equality
    Ⅱ. A connection between geographical expansion andsocial change
    Ⅲ. A connection between social change and financialprosperity
    (A) I only
    (B) Ⅱonly
    (C) Ⅲ only
    (D) Ⅰand Ⅱ only
    (E) Ⅰ,Ⅱ and Ⅲ
    5. It can be inferred that which of the following statementsis consistent with the Reactionist position as it isdescribed in the passage?
    (A) Continuity, not change, marked women‘s lives as they moved from East to West.
    (B) Women‘s experience on the North American frontierhas not received enough attention from modernhistorians.
    (C) Despite its rigors, the frontier offered women opportunities that had not been available in the East.
    (D) Gender relations were more difficult for women in the West than they were in the East.
    (E) Women on the North American frontier adopted new roles while at the same time reaffirming traditional roles.
    6. Which of the following best describes the organizationof the passage?
    (A) A current interpretation of a phenomenon is described and then ways in which it was developed are discussed.
    (B) Three theories are presented and then a new hypothesis that discounts those theories is described.
    (C) An important theory and its effects are discussed and then ways in which it has been revised are described.
    (D) A controversial theory is discussed and then viewpoints both for and against it are described.
    (E) A phenomenon is described and then theories concerning its correctness are discussed.
    7. Which of the following is true of the Stasist school as itis described in the passage?
    (A) It provides new interpretations of women‘s relationship to work and the law.
    (B) It resolves some of the ambiguities inherent in Turnerian and Reactionist thought.
    (C) It has recently been discounted by new research gathered on women‘s experience.
    (D) It avoids extreme positions taken by other writers on women‘s history.
    (E) It was the first school of thought to suggest substantial revisions to the Frontier Thesis.