高级英语第二册第十课学习辅导资料 下载本文

高级英语(第二册) Lesson 10 The Sad Young Men (Rod W. Horton and Herbert W. Edwards)

1 No aspect of life in the Twenties has been more commented upon and

sensationally romanticized than the so-called Revolt of the Younger Generation. The

slightest mention of the decade brings nostalgic recollections to the middle-aged and

curious questionings by the young: memories of the deliciously illicit thrill of the first

visit to a speakeasy, of the brave denunciation of Puritan morality, and of the

fashionable experimentations in amour in the parked sedan on a country road;

questions about the naughty, jazzy parties, the flask-toting \

stylistic vagaries of the \

really so wild?\

a Younger Generation problem?\

\

a Younger Generation Problem; \

immoral in social behavior at the time can now be seen in perspective as being

something considerably less sensational than the degenerauon of our jazzmad youth.

2 Actually, the revolt of the young people was a logical outcome of conditions in

the age: First of all, it must be remembered that the rebellion was not confined to the

Unit- ed States, but affected the entire Western world as a result of the aftermath of

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高级英语(第二册) Lesson 10 The Sad Young Men (Rod W. Horton and Herbert W. Edwards)

the first serious war in a century. Second, in the United States it was reluctantly

realized by some- subconsciously if not openly -- that our country was no longer

isolated in either politics or tradition and that we had reached an international stature

that would forever prevent us from retreating behind the artificial walls of a provincial

morality or the geographical protection of our two bordering oceans.

3 The rejection of Victorian gentility was, in any case, inevitable. The booming of

American industry, with its gigantic, roaring factories, its corporate impersonality, and

its largescale aggressiveness, no longer left any room for the code of polite behavior

and well-bred morality fashioned in a quieter and less competitive age. War or no war,

as the generations passed, it became increasingly difficult for our young people to

accept standards of behavior that bore no relationship to the bustling business

medium in which they were expected to battle for success. The war acted merely as a

catalytic agent in this breakdown of the Victorian social structure, and by precipitating

our young people into a pattern of mass murder it released their inhibited violent

energies which, after the shooting was over, were turned in both Europe and America

to the destruction of an obsolescent nineteenth-century society.

4 Thus in a changing world youth was faced with the challenge of bringing our

mores up to date. But at the same time it was tempted, in America at least, to escape

its responsibilities and retreat behind an air of naughty alcoholic sophistication and a

pose of Bohemian immorality. The faddishness , the wild spending of money on

transitory pleasures and momentary novelties , the hectic air of gaiety, the

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高级英语(第二册) Lesson 10 The Sad Young Men (Rod W. Horton and Herbert W. Edwards)

experimentation in sensation -- sex, drugs, alcohol, perversions -- were all part of the

pattern of escape, an escape made possible by a general prosperity and a post-war

fatigue with politics, economic restrictions, and international responsibilities.

Prohibition afforded the young the additional opportunity of making their pleasures

illicit , and the much-publicized orgies and defiant manifestoes of the intellectuals

crowding into Greenwich Village gave them a pattern and a philosophic defense for

their escapism. And like most escapist sprees, this one lasted until the money ran out,

until the crash of the world economic structure at the end of the decade called the

party to a halt and forced the revelers to sober up and face the problems of the new age.

5 The rebellion started with World War I. The prolonged stalemate of 1915 –

1916, the increasing insolence of Germany toward the United States, and our official

reluctance to declare our status as a belligerent were intolerable to many of our

idealistic citizens, and with typical American adventurousness enhanced somewhat by

the strenuous jingoism of Theodore Roosevelt, our young men began to enlist under

foreign flags. In the words of Joe Williams, in John Dos Passos' U. S. A., they \

to get into the fun before the whole thing turned belly up.\

1916-- 1917, was still a romantic occupation. The young men of college age in 1917

knew nothing of modern warfare. The strife of 1861 --1865 had popularly become, in

motion picture and story, a magnolia-scented soap opera, while the one

hundred-days' fracas with Spain in 1898 had dissolved into a one-sided victory at

Manila and a cinematic charge up San Juan Hill. Furthermore, there were enough high

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高级英语(第二册) Lesson 10 The Sad Young Men (Rod W. Horton and Herbert W. Edwards)

school assembly orators proclaiming the character-forming force of the strenuous life

to convince more than enough otherwise sensible boys that service in the European

conflict would be of great personal value, in addition to being idealistic and exciting.

Accordingly, they began to join the various armies in increasing numbers, the

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wherever else they could find a place. Those who were reluctant to serve in a foreign

army talked excitedly about Preparedness, occasionally considered joining the

National Guard, and rushed to enlist when we finally did enter the conflict. So

tremendous was the storming of recruitment centers that harassed sergeants actually

pleaded with volunteers to \

self-respecting person wanted to suffer the disgrace of being drafted, the enlistment

craze continued unabated.

6 Naturally, the spirit of carnival and the enthusiasm for high military adventure

were soon dissipated once the eager young men had received a good taste of

twentieth- century warfare. To their lasting glory, they fought with distinction, but it

was a much altered group of soldiers who returned from the battlefields in 1919.

Especially was this true of the college contingent, whose idealism had led them to

enlist early and who had generally seen a considerable amount of action. To them, it

was bitter to return to a home town virtually untouched by the conflict, where citizens

still talked with the naive Fourth-of-duly bombast they themselves had been guilty of

two or three years earlier. It was even more bitter to find that their old jobs had been

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