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Passage 6

Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.

During the latter part of the 19th century, two kinds of entertainment developed in America to meet the needs of the new urban dwellers—the ballpark and vaudeville. Both kinds of entertainment helped to fill the growing amount of leisure time that workers enjoyed. Both later were transformed into mass-mediated (大众媒体化的)activities.

The first professional baseball team, the Cincinnati Red Stockings, was founded in 1869, and soon there were teams in all the major Eastern and Mid-western cities. The ballpark brought together crowds of strangers who could experience a sense of community within the big city as they watched a baseball game. Immigrants were able to shake loose their ethnic ties and become absorbed in the new national game, which was becoming representative of the “American spirit.” The green fields and fresh air of the ballpark were a welcome change from the sea of bricks, stone and eventually concrete that dominated the city scene.

Workers could temporarily escape the routine and dullness of their daily lives by indirectly participating in the competition and accomplishment that baseball games symbolized. Baseball reflected the competitiveness of the workplace and the capitalist ethic, as players were bought and sold and were regarded as property. The ballpark also provided a means for spectators to release their frustrations against authority figures.

  • As professional baseball emerged as a popular pastime, it became an increasingly commercial enterprise. Stadiums were built to seat the spectators, and the hawkers (小贩)of beer, soda, hot dogs, peanuts and popcorn soon appeared. Advertising on signboards,
  • A.A place where they could make friends with local people.
  • B.A place where they might sense unpleasant urban atmosphere.
  • C.A place where they would feel free from ethnic difference.
  • D.A place where they might start to worry about their identity.
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