第 43 題至 46 題為篇章結構,各題請依文意,從四個選項中選出最合適者,各題答案內容不重複 In American ideology, the individual reigns supreme. 43 The historian Frederick Jackson Turner proposed
that the westward expansion and frontier experience of the nineteenth century was a major force in shaping this aspect
of our national character. He wrote, “That restless, nervous energy; that dominant individualism, working for good and
for evil, and withal that buoyancy and exuberance which comes with freedom—these are traits of the frontier.”
44 Indeed, from a very early age, selfhood and independence are stressed. Children learn they must stand on
their own two feet in a competitive world where self-reliance and self-realization are the name of the game. The
expression “self-made” man or woman expresses that American ideal perfectly.
It is not surprising then that in comparison to many other cultures, we are more tolerant of individual differences,
idiosyncracies, and non-conformity. 45 Although attitudes towards conformity have not been fixed historically
and have changed over time, in general, Americans seem to dread the idea of being, acting, and looking just like their
neighbors.
Indeed, Americans have ambivalent feelings about neighbors. This ambivalence reflects the tension we feel over our
loyalties to group and to self and which of the two takes precedence. In other cultures, the group clearly takes precedence.
However, in the United States, we draw boundaries around individuals and circumscribe their “space.” 46 It is a
concept that many foreigners find odd, even offensive. But again, it is the individual that is valued over the group,
whether that group is a family, corporation, or community.
【題組】45
(A) Perhaps it must be so in a culture as diverse as ours, a culture made up of so many subcultures.
(B) In fact, we train our children to define and distinguish themselves from their peers, to be self-reliant and
autonomous.
(C) Historically, our culture has championed no single group, but it has championed the idea of the individual
man or woman.
(D) In a society as pluralistic as our own, where there is little consensus on what constitutes “the greater good”
and where diverse traditions, world views, and moral systems compete, it is inevitable that conflicts arise.