-her
2015
年
1
月
31
日雅思阅读真题与解析
Passage 1
(
旧题
)
题材:历史文化类
题目:
Tattoo on Tikopia
题型:判断
4+
图表填空
5+
表格填空
4
文章大意:
本文研究的是毛利人的传统纹身,
先
介绍背景
(
定义、
历史
)
,
科学家喜欢研究这种纹身,
然后介绍纹身的制作工艺,最后说了纹身的含义。
A There are still debates
about the originsof Polynesian culture, but one
thing we can ensure
is that Polynesia
is not asingle tribe but a complex one.
Polynesians which includes
Marquesans
,
Samoans, Niueans,
Tongans, Cook Islanders, Hawaiians, Tahitians,
andMaori, arc genetically
linked to
indigenous peoples of parts of Southeast s a sub-
region of Occania, comprising of
a
large grouping of over 1 ,000islands scattered
over the central and southern Pacific Ocean,
within atriangle that has New Zealand,
Hawaii and Easter Island as its corners.
B Polynesian
history has fascinated thewestern world since
Pacific cultures were first
contacted
by European explorersin the late 18th century. The
small island of Tikopia, for many
people - evenfor many Solomon
Islanders-- is so far away that it seems like a
mythical land;a
place like Namia that
magical land in C. S. Lewis, classic, ?The
Chronicles of Namia.” Maybe
because of
it
—
Tikopia, its people,
and their cultures have long fascinatedscholars,
travelers, and
casual observers. Like
the pioneers Peter Dillion,Dumoni D' Urville and
John Colleridge Patterson
who visited
and wrote about theisland in the 1800s, Raymond
Firth is one of those people
captured
by thealluring attraction of Tikopia. As a result,
he had made a number of trips tothe
island since 1920s and recorded his
experiences, observations and reflectionson
Tikopia, its
people, cultures and the
changes that have occurred.
C While engaged in study of
the kinship andreligious life of the people of
Tikopia, Firth
made a few observations
on theirtattooing. Brief though these notes are
they may be worth putting
on record
asan indication of the sociological setting of the
practice in this primitivePolynesian
community. The origin of the English
word ?tattoo' actually comesfrom the Tikopia word
'tatau
1.
The word for tattoo
marks in general is tau,and the operation of
tattooing is known as ta tau, ta
being
thegeneric term for the act of striking.
D The technique
oftattooing was similar throughout Polynesia.
Traditional tattoo artists
createtheir
indelible tattoos using pigment made from the
candlenut or kukui , they bum
the nut
inside a bowl made of half a coconut shell. They
thenscrape out the soot and use a pestle to
mix it with liquid. Bluing is
sometimesadded to counteract the reddish hue of
the carbon-based
pigment. It also
makesthe outline of the inscribed designs bolder
on the dark skin of
tattooingsubjects.
E For the
instrumentsused when tattooing, specialists used a
range of chisels made from
albatrosswing bone which were hafted
onto a handle which was made from the heart wood
ofthe
bush and struck with a mallet.
The tattooer began by sketching withcharcoal a
design on the
supine subject, whose
skin at that location wasstretched taut by one
more apprentices. The tattooer
then
dipped the appropriatepoints - either a single one
or a whole comb into the ink (usually
contained ina coconut-shell cup) and
tapped it into the subject's skin, holding the
bladehandle in
one hand and tapping it
with the other. The blood that usuallytrickled
from the punctures was
wiped away
either by the tattooer or hisapprentice, the
latter having also served by restraining a
pain-wracked subjectfrom moving, for
the operation was inevitably painful a test of
fortitude
thattattooers sought to
shorten by working as fast as possible. In fact,
tattoosnearly always festered
and often
led to sickness - and in some cases death.
F In ancient
Polynesian society, nearlyeveryone was tattooed.
It was an integral part of
ancient
culture and was muchmore than a body ornament.
Tattooing indicated ones genealogy
and/or rank insociety. It was a sign of
wealth, of strength and of the ability to
endurepain. Those
who went without them
were seen as persons of lower social such, chiefs
and warriors
generally had the most
elaborate ing was generally begun at
adolescence
,
and would
often not be completed for a number of
years. Receivingtattoo constituted an important
milestone
between childhood and
adulthood, andwas accompanied by many rites and
rituals. Apart from
signaling status
andrank, another reason for the practice in
traditional times was to make a
personmore attractive to the opposite
sex.
G The male
facial tattoo is generallydivided into eight
sections of the face. The center of the
forehead designateda person's general
rank. The area around the brows designated his
position.
Thearea around the eyes and
the nose designated his hapu, or sub-tribe rank.
Thearea around the
temples served to
detail ms marital status, like the number
ofmarriages. The area under the nose
displayed his signature. This signature
wasonce memorized by tribal chiefs who used it
when
buying property, signingdeeds, and
officiating orders. The cheek area designated the
nature of
theperson's work. The chin
area showed the person's mana. Lastly, the jaw
areadesignated a
person's birth status.
H A person's
ancestry is indicated on eachside of the face. The
left side is generally the
father's
side
,
and the right side was
the mother's. The manutahi design is workedon the
men?s back.
It consists of two vertical
lines drawn down the spine, withshort vertical
lines between them.
When a man had the
manutahi on his back, he took pride in himself. At
gatherings of the people
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-her
-her
-her
-her
-her
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