GRE作文分類題庫(kù)-ISSUE(3)

字號(hào):

九 藝術(shù)類
    1. Imaginative works such as novels, plays, films, fairytales, and legends
    present a more accurate and meaningful picture of human experience than do
    factual accounts. Because the creators of fiction shape and focus on
    reality rather than report it literally, their creations have a more
    lasting significance.
    2. The arts (painting, music, literature, etc.) reveal the otherwise hidden
    ideas and impulses of a society.
    3. ‘It is the artist, not the critic,’ who gives society something of
    lasting value. A person who evaluates works of art, such as novels, films
    music, paintings, etc.
    4. As long as people in a society are hungry or out of work or lack the
    basic skills needed to survive, the use of public resources to support the
    arts is inappropriate—and, perhaps, even cruel—when one considers all the
    potential uses of such money.
    5. In order for any work of art—whether film, literature, sculpture, or a
    song—to have merit, it must be understandable to most people.
    十 文化類
    1. Governments must ensure that their major cities receive the financial
    support they need in order to thrive, because it is primarily in cities
    that a nation’s cultural traditions are preserved and generated.
    2. Rituals and ceremonies help define a culture. Without them, societies or
    groups of people have a diminished sense of who they are.
    3. The way people look, dress, and act reveals their attitudes and
    interests. You can tell much about a society’s ideas and values by
    observing the appearance and behavior of its people.
    4. The true value of a civilization is reflected in its artistic creations
    rather than in its scientific accomplishments.
    十一 國(guó)際類
    1. All nations should help support the development of a global university
    designed to engage students in the process of solving the world’s most
    persistent social problems.
    2. Many of the world’s lesser-known languages are being lost as fewer and
    fewer people speak them. The government of countries in which these
    languages are spoken should act to prevent such languages from becoming
    extinct.
    3. With the growth of global networks in such areas as economics and
    communication, there is no doubt that every aspect of society—including
    education, politics, the arts, and the sciences—will benefit greatly from
    international influences.
    4. The surest indicator of a great nation is not the achievements of its
    rulers, artists, or scientists, but the general welfare of all its people.
    5. The material progress and well-being of one country are necessarily
    connected to the material progress and well-being of all other countries.