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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
1959: The Year That Changed Everything
A crowd gathers in New York's Times Square to usher1 in the New Year, 1959. The importance of what future met them that year is still being debated.
How Significant Will 2009 Appear in the Lens of History? Jeff Greenfield Focuses on How Another Iconic Year Played Out
Many of us may be looking back on 2009 and exclaiming what a year! . . . but there's no telling whether future historians will agree. Take, for example, the mixed judgments2 you can find about a year that concluded half a century ago. Senior political correspondent Jeff Greenfield reports our Cover Story:
The year 2009 is barely in our rearview mirror, but already we know some events this year will continue to loom3 large.
The inauguration4 of the first black president . . . the collapse5 of the once-mighty American auto6 industry . . . the struggle to revive the country's economy.
But in the longer view of history, how significant will this past year be? How will 2009 compare with other clearly consequential7 years?
Will it compare, for example, to 1945, which marked the end of a world war, the death of the most powerful of men, and the birth of a weapon that would define the coming age?
Or how about 1968, when at home a war-turned-quagmire brought a challenge to a sitting president, and the murder of the civil rights leader triggered violence in city after city - followed just a few months later by the killing8 of a potential president and riots at a political convention to end all conventions.
Now, consider the year 1959. Could that really be a year that changed everything?
The last year of the fifties, a decade whose image is all but etched in stone: men in grey flannel9 suits, Stepford wives in suburban10 complacency, a veritable white bread sandwich of a time?
Would anyone seriously claim that this was a time when the Earth moved, when foundations began to crumble11?
"There was this growing sense that things were changing," he said. "The new is good. The new is something worth embracing."
Kaplan's argument ranges far and wide. From science and technology come the birth of the microchip, without which "We couldn't have digital telephones," Kaplan said. "We couldn't have satellites. I mean, there's almost nothing that we have in everyday life that doesn't have microchips in it."
1959 also brought the first steps toward the birth control pill.
"This allowed not just a sexual revolution, but it allowed women to get jobs, to advance professionally," Kaplan said. "They could control their own reproductive cycles that control everything about their lives. I mean, that was immense."
In the arts, says Kaplan, 1959 brought upheaval13 upon upheaval: The opening of the Guggenheim Museum in New York (left), whose very architecture challenged its neighbors . . . and whose collection was the first wholly devoted14 to abstract art.
In music, Miles Davis and Ornette Coleman, were breaking the chord structure of older jazz.
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And censorship was dealt a fatal blow when a court permitted the distribution of the openly sexual "Lady Chatterly's Lover."
"Up until there were all these pulls, which constrained15 where things could go," Kaplan said. "And in that year, you had the first breaking out from that pull."
But can a single year like 1959 really bear all that weight? Kaplan says the year was significant in civil rights - a federal commission held hearings, and the lynching of Mack Charles Parker triggered national outrage16.
But wait a minute. Think about the civil rights movement. Does 1959 really measure up?
Does it equal 1954's Supreme17 Court decision striking down school segregation18? Or the Montgomery bus boycott19 of 1956? Or the lunch counter sit-ins across the South that began in 1960?
And what about dating the birth control pill to 1959? Yes, research began that year, but should we measure the impact of the pill when research began, or when it first went on the market, in the 1960s?
And, most fundamentally, does history really work this way? Are some years far more equal than others? Ask two people which year they think was especially significant, and you're likely to get two different opinions.
Newsweek editor and Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Jon Meachem says, "There are years in which reality was one way before they started, and another way afterward20. You think about 1968, You think about 2000.
"I think you could find any year in American history, and say X or Y began, or ended, whether it's somebody being born, whether it's the invention of something."
Meachem offered a "fun game": Suggesting the largest single event in human history.
"My theory is that the two most significant events are the trial and crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth, and the Second World War. Because of the crucifixion, given the birth of Christianity, the shifting of the calendar, everything that came from that. And the Second World War, because of the splitting of the atom, and suddenly, for the first time, we had the capacity to destroy everything."
Writer Christohper Hitchens points to one of the most frequently-cited of all years as worthy21 of special attention: 1914 - the year the First World War began.
"A step was taken into apocalypse and revolution and mass-produced industrialized violence and cruelty, then, that couldn't be taken back again," he said. "It's the hinge event."
But Hitchens and Meachem agree that to some extent, viewing history as discrete22 events in particular years is a kind of organizing tool.
"Remember what Napoleon said about history? It's a fable23 agreed upon," said Meachem. "I think it's essentially24 what we're talking about, is that we find ways to organize our experience, in order to understand what happened and why, and whether we can learn anything from it."
"We are pattern-seeking mammals," said Hitchens. "We look for explanations. We'd rather have junk explanations than no explanations at all. Anything's better than having no explanation!"
So what about the case for 1959? Fred Kaplan answers the challenge to defend his year:
"Right, of course. I'm referring to this as a pivotal year when something changed. Now, you don't see all the results of the change in the year when it begins to change. All I'm saying is that everything that followed stemmed from changes that took place then."
So, will 2009 wind up as "just another year"? Or as a pivotal moment in the history of the 21st century? Check back with us around . . . 2059.
点击收听单词发音
1 usher | |
n.带位员,招待员;vt.引导,护送;vi.做招待,担任引座员 | |
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2 judgments | |
判断( judgment的名词复数 ); 鉴定; 评价; 审判 | |
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3 loom | |
n.织布机,织机;v.隐现,(危险、忧虑等)迫近 | |
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4 inauguration | |
n.开幕、就职典礼 | |
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5 collapse | |
vi.累倒;昏倒;倒塌;塌陷 | |
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6 auto | |
n.(=automobile)(口语)汽车 | |
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7 consequential | |
adj.作为结果的,间接的;重要的 | |
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8 killing | |
n.巨额利润;突然赚大钱,发大财 | |
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9 flannel | |
n.法兰绒;法兰绒衣服 | |
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10 suburban | |
adj.城郊的,在郊区的 | |
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11 crumble | |
vi.碎裂,崩溃;vt.弄碎,摧毁 | |
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12 landmark | |
n.陆标,划时代的事,地界标 | |
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13 upheaval | |
n.胀起,(地壳)的隆起;剧变,动乱 | |
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14 devoted | |
adj.忠诚的,忠实的,热心的,献身于...的 | |
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15 constrained | |
adj.束缚的,节制的 | |
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16 outrage | |
n.暴行,侮辱,愤怒;vt.凌辱,激怒 | |
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17 supreme | |
adj.极度的,最重要的;至高的,最高的 | |
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18 segregation | |
n.隔离,种族隔离 | |
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19 boycott | |
n./v.(联合)抵制,拒绝参与 | |
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20 afterward | |
adv.后来;以后 | |
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21 worthy | |
adj.(of)值得的,配得上的;有价值的 | |
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22 discrete | |
adj.个别的,分离的,不连续的 | |
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23 fable | |
n.寓言;童话;神话 | |
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24 essentially | |
adv.本质上,实质上,基本上 | |
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