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請依下文回答第 46 題至第 50 題: Urban legends are an important part of popular culture, experts say, offering insight into our fears and the state of society. They’re also good fun. “Life is so much more interesting with monsters in it,” says Mikel J. Koven, a folklorist. “It’s the same with these legends. They’re just good stories.” Like the variations in the stories themselves, folklorists all have their own definitions of what makes an urban legend. Academics have always disagreed on whether urban legends are, by definition, too fantastic to be true or at least partly based on fact, said Koven, who tends to believe the latter. Urban legends aren’t easily verifiable, by nature. Usually passed on by word of mouth or in e-mail form, they often invoke the famous clause—“it happened to friend of a friend”(or FOAF)that makes finding the original source of the story virtually impossible. Discovering the truth behind urban legends, however, isn’t as important as the lessons they impart, experts say. “The lack of verification in no way diminishes the appeal that urban legends have for us,” writes Jan Harold Brunvand in “The Vanishing Hitchhiker: American Urban Legends and Their Meanings.” “We enjoy them merely as stories, and tend to at least half-believe them as possibly accurate reports.” 
 A renowned folklorist, Brunvand is considered the pre-eminent scholar on urban legends. The definition of an urban legend, he writes, is “a strong basic story-appeal, a foundation in actual belief, and a meaningful message or moral.” Most urban legends tend to offer a moral lesson, Koven agreed, that is always interpreted differently depending on the individual. The lessons don’t necessarily have to be of the deep, meaning-of-life, variety, he said. Urban legends are also good indicators of what’s going on in current society, said Koven. “By looking at what’s implied in a story, we get an insight into the fears of a group in society,” he said. Urban legends “need to make cultural sense,” he said, noting that some stick around for decades while others fizzle out depending on their relevance to the modern social order. It’s a lack of information coupled with these fears that tends to give rise to new legends, Koven said. “When demand exceeds supply, people will fill in the gaps with their own information as they’ll just make it up.” The abundance of conspiracy theories and legends surrounding 9/11, the war in Iraq and Hurricane Katrina seems to point to distrust in the government among some groups, he said. But urban legends aren’t all serious life lessons and conspiracy theories, experts say, with the scariest, most plausible ones often framed as funny stories. Those stories can spread like wildfire in today’s Internet world, but they’ve been part of human culture as long as there has been culture, and Brunvand argues that legends should be around as long as there are inexplicable curiosities in life.

【題組】48 According to the expert, what is people’s common attitude toward urban legends?
(A) They don’t believe them at first, but after verification, they do.
(B) They dismiss them as nonsense; they don’t believe them at all.
(C) They not only believe them but also spread them without consideration.
(D) They tend to think they are stories, or half-believe them with some details.


答案:登入後觀看
難度: 簡單
最佳解!
人定勝天要堅持-忍- 研二下 (2020/03/14)
(d)他們往往認為自己是故事,.....看完整詳解
2F
112年已上岸,挑戰極限 博二下 (2022/10/10)

“We enjoy them merely as stories, and tend to at least half-believe them as possibly accurate reports.” 
“我們只是把它們當作故事來欣賞,並且傾向於至少半信半疑地相信它們可能是準確的報導。”
專家表示,人們對都市傳說的普遍態度是什麼?

(A) 起初他們不相信,但經過核實,他們相信。

(B) 他們認為這是無稽之談; 他們根本不相信他們。

(C) 他們不僅相信它們,而且不加考慮地傳播它們。

(D) 他們傾向於認為他們是故事,或者對一些細節半信半疑。

請依下文回答第 46 題至第 50 題: Urban legends are a..-阿摩線上測驗