日韩色综合-日韩色中色-日韩色在线-日韩色哟哟-国产ts在线视频-国产suv精品一区二区69

手機APP下載

您現在的位置: 首頁 > 在線廣播 > VOA慢速英語 > VOA慢速-美國人物志 > 正文

VOA美國人物志(翻譯+字幕+講解):科幻與幽默的結合—庫爾特·馮內古特

來源:可可英語 編輯:Ceciliya ?  可可英語APP下載 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
 下載MP3到電腦  批量下載MP3和LRC到手機
加載中..
KD#&!qzZVaU-Ec1^

uh@QnN=w5j_FY4

I'm Steve Ember. And I'm Shirley Griffith with People in America in VOA Special English. Today we tell about Kurt Vonnegut, a writer and thinker who shook up the country with his unusual writing style and subjects. He helped energize huge numbers of young people to protest the Vietnam War and to always question the powers that be. It took Kurt Vonnegut about twenty-five years to write his most famous book, "Slaughterhouse-Five." It was published in nineteen sixty-nine. The book remains required reading in high school and college English classes across the country. It includes this description of the fire-bombing of Dresden, Germany, by Allied forces during World War Two, as witnessed by a soldier named Billy Pilgrim:

~pv(z]YWr5(,CK

"There was a fire-storm out there. Dresden was one big flame. The one flame ate everything organic, everything that would burn. It wasn't safe to come out of the shelter until noon the next day. When the Americans and their guards did come out, the sky was black with smoke. The sun was an angry little pinhead. Dresden was like the moon now, nothing but minerals. The stones were hot. Everybody else in the neighborhood was dead. So it goes." Kurt Vonnegut, a prisoner of war like Pilgrim, witnessed the bombing of Dresden. The waste of human life and other treasures greatly angered him. His novels contain some of that anger. But Vonnegut always balanced his work with humor and the use of wildly unlikely events presented as normal. For example, in "Slaughterhouse-Five," Billy Pilgrim visits the make-believe planet Tralfamadore. He and a beautiful movie star named Montana Wildhack fall in love there in a clear ball of a house. They are studied by the Tralfamadorians and find happiness.

iJA&[wxE8GW)a[H!

Kurt Vonnegut compared the science fiction in "Slaughterhouse-Five" to the clowns in the plays of sixteenth century English writer William Shakespeare. Vonnegut believed such literary devices give the reader a rest before the story gets serious again. Kurt Vonnegut's own life was also filled with tragedy and laughter. He was born in nineteen twenty-two in Indianapolis, Indiana. His father was a building designer. His mother was from an extremely wealthy family. She suffered from mental illness and unhappiness as a failed writer. Vonnegut said his mother would have periods of madness where she would emotionally abuse his father. Vonnegut said his father was the gentlest man on the planet. Edith Vonnegut killed herself on Mother's Day, in nineteen forty-four. The act affected her son his whole life.

hQHwY^+[@Q

In nineteen fifty-eight, Kurt Vonnegut's sister and her husband died within two days of each other. Vonnegut and his wife at the time adopted the couple's three children. Kurt Vonnegut was interested in writing from at least his teenage years. He worked on his high school's newspaper. Later he studied at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York and became an editor of that school's newspaper. Vonnegut studied biochemistry. He followed in the footsteps of his older brother, Bernard, who was a scientist. However, Kurt Vonnegut was not a very good student. He left Cornell in nineteen forty-three and joined the army during World War Two. German forces captured him during the Battle of the Bulge in Western Europe. Vonnegut's experiences as a soldier and the bombing of Dresden were among the major influences in his life. He was a pacifist, someone who opposes war and violence for settling conflict. He once said: "You can teach people savagery. They may need savagery, but it's bad for the neighbors. I prefer to teach gentleness."

Ah(3)=EgML

He was not always gentle on himself, however. He battled depression for most of his life. In nineteen eighty-four, he tried to kill himself by taking too much sleep medicine. He said later that children of a parent who committed suicide will naturally think of death as a sensible solution to any problem. After World War Two, Vonnegut married a childhood friend, Jane Cox. They moved to Chicago, Illinois in nineteen forty-five. They had three children. Vonnegut studied anthropology at the University of Chicago. He also worked as a reporter.

guJWk^RR6soC,I

科幻與幽默的結合—庫爾特·馮內古特.jpg

)tBBl1,Y|!U*51gM

Kurt Vonnegut also began writing short stories. They were published in literary magazines. In nineteen fifty-two he wrote his first novel. "Player Piano" was influenced by Vonnegut's work at the power company, General Electric. Vonnegut said it was there that he got the idea of everything being controlled by computers. He told Playboy Magazine in nineteen seventy-three that it made perfect sense to have little clicking boxes, as he called them, make all the decisions for humans. But he said it was not good for human workers to be replaced by machines. Vonnegut said that he wrote science fiction because General Electric was science fiction to him. "Player Piano" describes a place called Ileum where the humans have surrendered to a computer.

^Y[ehV;[#+~#4R

Writers of science fiction are often considered less serious than writers of other kinds of fiction. As a result, Vonnegut's work was published in paperback and ignored by critics for several years. But people started listening more closely to Kurt Vonnegut's literary voice in the nineteen sixties. There was great public anger and protest over American military action in Vietnam. Distrust for the United States government was growing. Young people and minorities especially were speaking up against America's leaders and cultural restrictions. Vonnegut's statements about America, its people and its leaders mixed perfectly with that atmosphere. His novels became favorites of many people involved in the anti-establishment, politically progressive movement of that time.

@5WX2W(A%a.

"Cat's Cradle," published in nineteen sixty-three, is one example. It tells the story of a fictional scientist who helped invent the atomic bomb and something even more dangerous – a substance called ice-nine. "Cat's Cradle" is an extremely funny condemnation of many things. These include the arms race at the time -- efforts by countries to increase their nuclear weapons. It also makes jokes about organized religion and the United States government. In nineteen sixty-four, "Cat's Cradle" won a Hugo Award for science fiction. Also that year, Kurt Vonnegut began teaching at the Writers Workshop at the University of Iowa. He was a professor for many years and taught English at several universities and colleges. He wrote at least fifteen more books, including non-fiction. One of those books was "Breakfast of Champions," published in nineteen seventy-three. Vonnegut tells the story of a wealthy and crazy car salesman named Dwayne Hoover. Hoover reads science fiction books written by a man named Kilgore Trout. Hoover becomes more and more sure that the books are not fiction but reality.

JccuXh^_c+OFyV]

Here Kurt Vonnegut reads from an early version of "Breakfast of Champions." The reading took place in New York City in nineteen seventy. "My name is Dwayne Hoover and I am an experiment by the creator of the universe. I am the only creature in the entire universe who has free will. I am the only creature who has to figure out what to do next and why. Everybody else is a robot. I am pooped. I wish I were a robot too. It is perfectly exhausting having to reason all the time in a universe I never made." Kurt Vonnegut and his wife Jane separated in nineteen seventy. Vonnegut married photographer Jill Krementz nine years later. They adopted a daughter.

FmmfX~O3[AFp*b

Vonnegut continued to be politically outspoken. He used the American political crime called the Watergate scandal in his novel "Jailbird." He was also an early environmental activist. He spoke often and loudly about the long-term dangers of fossil fuel use, pollution and waste of natural resources. Vonnegut also condemned the Bush administration and the war in Iraq that began in two thousand three. Kurt Vonnegut published his last book in two thousand five. "A Man Without A Country" is a collection of his opinions of many subjects, including issues in modern American society. He died in two thousand seven after suffering brain injuries from a fall in his home. He was eighty-four. Kurt Vonnegut's children placed notes of thanks to his fans on the Vonnegut Web site. His daughter Nanny wrote: "I am so sorry for your loss as well as mine."

ls[4tr6)4L~LF&k73v

_W!hxGY6XOq~rWANE^65*l4Y%!~F%^VSxTTuitJEDO|;C|rWr!F&QnN

重點單詞   查看全部解釋    
merely ['miəli]

想一想再看

adv. 僅僅,只不過

 
outspoken [aut'spəukən]

想一想再看

adj. 直言無諱的,坦率的 動詞outspeak的過去

 
military ['militəri]

想一想再看

adj. 軍事的
n. 軍隊

聯想記憶
separated ['sepəreitid]

想一想再看

adj. 分居;分開的;不在一起生活的 v. 分開;隔開

 
literary ['litərəri]

想一想再看

adj. 文學的

聯想記憶
extremely [iks'tri:mli]

想一想再看

adv. 極其,非常

聯想記憶
unlikely [ʌn'laikli]

想一想再看

adj. 不太可能的

 
affected [ə'fektid]

想一想再看

adj. 受影響的,受感動的,受疾病侵襲的 adj. 做

聯想記憶
prisoner ['prizənə]

想一想再看

n. 囚犯

 
gentleness

想一想再看

n. 溫順;親切;高貴;彬彬有禮

 
?
發布評論我來說2句

    最新文章

    可可英語官方微信(微信號:ikekenet)

    每天向大家推送短小精悍的英語學習資料.

    添加方式1.掃描上方可可官方微信二維碼。
    添加方式2.搜索微信號ikekenet添加即可。
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 正义回廊 电影| 5.25心理健康日主题班会ppt| 髋关节置换术后护理ppt| 吴婷个人资料及照片| 男女小视频| 耳石症复位3d动画| 董璇惊艳写真| 郑柔美个人简介| 服务群众方面整改成效| 情侣不雅视频| 抖音下截| 无声无息电影| 日本大片ppt免费ppt| 精品视频| 米奇888| 崔恩| 黄大年主要事迹概括| 宝宝乐园| 张柏芝演的电视剧| 美娜个人资料简介| 金珠主演电影韩剧| 寡妇4做爰电影| 艳妇乳肉豪妇荡乳xxx| 哪吒电影1| 欧美比基尼美女| 星速| cctv6电影节目表| 《与凤行》演员表| 成都屏蔽机柜厂| 恋人电影| 大森元贵| 碑文格式范例 墓碑图片| 繁华电视剧剧情介绍| 工业硫酸| 可能歌词完整版| 暴走财神1| 单敬尧| 但愿人长久| 我在等你回家剧情介绍| 湿身美女| teen porn|