历年考研英语阅读理解mp3(06-1)(在线收听

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[00:06.07]2006 Text1
[00:11.21]In spite of "endless talk of difference,"
[00:14.54]American society is an amazing machine
[00:17.56]for homogenizing people.
[00:20.18]There is "the democratizing uniformity of dress
[00:23.72]and discourse,
[00:25.16]and the casualness and absence of deference"
[00:28.28]characteristic of popular culture.
[00:31.60]People are absorbed into "a culture of consumption"
[00:35.31]launched by the 19th-century department stores
[00:38.63]that offered "vast arrays of goods in an elegant atmosphere.
[00:43.48]Instead of intimate shops catering to a knowledgeable elite"
[00:47.81]these were stores "anyone could enter,
[00:50.59]regardless of class or background.
[00:54.34]This turned shopping into a public and democratic act."
[00:59.17]The mass media, advertising and sports are
[01:02.40]other forces for homogenization.
[01:05.33]Immigrants are quickly fitting into this common culture,
[01:08.88]which may not be altogether elevating
[01:11.89]but is hardly poisonous.
[01:14.73]Writing for the National Immigration Forum,
[01:17.44]Gregory Rodriguez reports that today's immigration is
[01:21.29]neither at unprecedented level
[01:23.51]nor resistant to assimilation.
[01:26.74]In 1998 immigrants were 9.8 percent of population;
[01:32.42]in 1900, 13.6 percent.
[01:36.63]In the 10 years prior to 1990,
[01:39.75]3.1 immigrants arrived for every 1,000 residents;
[01:44.69]in the 10 years prior to 1890,
[01:47.81]9.2 for every 1,000.
[01:51.45]Now, consider three indices of assimilation--
[01:55.46]language, home ownership and intermarriage.
[02:00.01]The 1990 Census revealed
[02:02.83]that "a majority of immigrants
[02:04.24]from each of the fifteen most common countries of
[02:06.98]origin spoke English 'well' or 'very well'
[02:10.50]after ten years of residence."
[02:13.42]The children of immigrants tend to be bilingual
[02:16.66]and proficient in English.
[02:19.18]"By the third generation,
[02:20.80]the original language is lost
[02:22.70]in the majority of immigrant families."
[02:26.34]Hence the description of America as a "graveyard" for languages.
[02:31.17]By 1996 foreign-born immigrants
[02:34.60]who had arrived before 1970
[02:37.23]had a home ownership rate of 75.6 percent,
[02:41.56]higher than the 69.8 percent rate
[02:44.69]among native-born Americans.
[02:47.52]Foreign-born Asians and Hispanics
[02:50.05]"have higher rates of intermarriage
[02:51.90]than do U.S.-born whites and blacks."
[02:55.93]By the third generation,
[02:57.95]one third of Hispanic women are married to non-Hispanics,
[03:02.10]and 41 percent of Asian-American women
[03:04.90]are married to non-Asians.
[03:07.53]Rodriguez notes that children in remote villages
[03:10.44]around the world
[03:11.65]are fans of superstars like Arnold Schwarzenegger
[03:15.00]and Garth Brooks,
[03:17.22]yet "some Americans fear
[03:19.12]that immigrant living within the United States
[03:21.43]remain somehow immune to the nation's assimilative power."
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[03:27.04]Are there divisive issues and pockets of seething
[03:29.95]anger in America? Indeed.
[03:32.87]It is big enough to have a bit of everything.
[03:35.40]But particularly when viewed against America's turbulent past,
[03:39.73]today's social indices hardly suggest a dark
[03:43.09]and deteriorating social environment.
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