鄧玉梅
主題語境:文化 篇幅:387詞 篇 建議用時:7分鐘
1 The ten?car subway train was adorned at theend of June in a tunnel in Queens. The artistsappeared to use paint rollers to cover it alongone side, from top to bottom, in an awfulshade of pink with a brown line.
2 Tagging (涂鴉) a train is often less about artand more about the prize of marking something that involves risk and echoes the originalgraffiti writers, who blanketed subway trains, including the windows and seats inside,in the 1970s and 1980s.
3 “Modern graffiti began in Philadelphia in the 1960s. But it became an art form in NewYork City,” says Eric Felisbret, author of Graffiti New York.“ Graffiti benefited fromthe popularity of hip?hop globally,”says Mr Felisbret. “Out of all the elements ofhip?hop, graffiti is by far the most rebellious... Back then, all graffiti was illegal.”
4 In 2020, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), which runs the subway,spent $1.2 million on cleaning. By the end of May 2022 it had already spent$1.1 million. In all of 2021, 681 subway cars were“ ruined”. In 2023, more than 700?cars have been“ ruined”. More than one in ten subway cars had to be taken out of servicefor cleaning.
5 The recent spike in subway graffiti activity once paralleled the lifting of travel restrictions.The graffiti on trains usually gets cleaned or hidden quickly, so artists postimages of their work on social media. Sharif Profit, who organizes the annual GraffitiHall of Fame in Harlem, says he can always tell when the work is done by someonefrom another country“: It is not on the same level.”
6 Tagging on the subway is dangerous. The live third rail is lethal (致命的) and the tunnelsare dark. Trains can appear with little warning, so trespassers (不法進入者) mayhave no way of avoiding them. Two French graffiti artists were killed by a train inBrooklyn in April.
7 The MTA removes any tagged train so as to avoid encouraging other people. Passengersthen have to wait longer.“ That was the case recently,” says Richard Davey, head of theMTA's New York City Transit system, when eight trains were ruined. The resultingdelays affected thousands of commuters.“ It's our goal to make sure we don't return tothe 1970s,” he says“, whether it's in our stations or on our cars.”
8 Graffiti on the subway began to die out in the late 1980s. One former graffiti writer saidit is almost shocking to see tagging there now.
Reading
Check
1. Why do graffiti artists tag a subway train?
A. For the prize of an art competition.
B. In pursuit of artistic beauty.
C. To express their dissatisfaction with society.
D. To imitate the early graffiti creators.
2. What does the underlined word“ spike” in paragraph 5 mean?
A. Increase.B. Participation.
C. Drop.D. Pause.
3. What can we infer about tagging from the text?
A. It helps people better understand the world.
B. It has brought inconvenience to commuters.
C. Modern graffiti was at its peak in the 1970s.
D. It is embraced by a majority of artists now.
Language
Study
Ⅰ. Difficult sentence in the text
Tagging a train is often less about art and more about the prize of marking somethingthat involves risk and echoes the original graffiti writers, who blanketed subway trains, includingthe windows and seats inside, in the 1970s and 1980s. 涂鴉列車往往不是為了藝術(shù),更多的是為了獲得標記的獎賞,這涉及風(fēng)險,也與最初的涂鴉作者不謀而合,他們在20世紀70年代和80年代在地鐵列車上涂鴉,包括車窗和車廂內(nèi)的座位。
【點石成金】本句中,that引導(dǎo)的是一個定語從句,先行詞為something;who引導(dǎo)的是一個非限制性定語從句,先行詞為the original graffiti writers。
Ⅱ. Text?centered chunks
benefit from 受益于……
take...out of service 停止使用……
on the same level 處于同一水平
die out 逐漸減少
make sure 確保