单选题 Many things make people think artists are weird—the odd hours, the nonconformity, the clove cigarettes. But the weirdest may be this: artists' only job is to explore emotions, and yet they choose to focus on the ones that feel lousy. Art today can give you anomie, no problem. Bittersweetness? You got it. Tristesse? What size you want that in? But great art, as defined by those in the great-art-defining business, is almost never about simple, unironic happiness.
This wasn't always so. The earliest forms of art, like painting and music, are those best suited for expressing joy. But somewhere in the 19th century, more artists began seeing happiness as insipid, phony or, worst of all, boring—in Tolstoy's words, "All happy families are alike." We went from Wordsworth's daffodils to Baudelaire's flowers of evil. In the 20th century, classical music became more atonal, visual art more unsettling. Artists who focused on making their audiences feel good, from Usher to Thomas Kinkade, were labeled "pop".
Sure, there have been exceptions (say, Matisse's The Dance), but it would not be a stretch to say that for the past century or so, serious art has been at war with happiness. In 1824, Beethoven completed the Ode to Joy. In 1962, novelist Anthony Burgess used it in A Clockwork Orange as the favorite piece of his ultra-violent antihero. If someone titles an art movie Happiness, it is a good bet that it will be—as the 1998 Todd Solondz film was—about deeply unhappy people, including a telephone pervert and a pedophile.
You could argue that art became more skeptical of happiness because modem times have seen such misery. But it's not as if earlier times didn't know perpetual war, disaster and the massacre of innocents. The reason, in fact, may be just the opposite: there is too much happiness in the world today.
After all, what is the one modem form of expression almost completely dedicated to depicting happiness? Advertising. The rise of anti-happy art almost exactly tracks the emergence of mass media, and with it, a commercial culture in which happiness is not just an ideal but an ideology.
People in earlier eras were surrounded by reminders of misery. They worked gruelingly, lived with few protections and died young. In the West, before mass communication and literacy, the most powerful mass medium was the church, which reminded worshippers that their souls were in peril and that they would someday be meat for worms. On top of all this, they did not exactly need their art to be a bummer too.
Today the messages your average Westerner is bombarded with are not religious but commercial, and relentlessly happy. Fast-food eaters, news anchors, text messengers, are all smiling, smiling, smiling, except for that guy who keeps losing loans to Ditech. Our magazines feature beaming celebrities and happy families in perfect homes. (Tolstoy clearly never edited a shelter mag.) And since these messages have an agenda—to pry our wallets from our pockets—they make the very idea of happiness seem bogus. "Celebrate!" commanded the ads for the arthritis drug Celebrex, before we found out it could increase the risk of heart attacks.
It gets exhausting, this constant goad to joy. If you're not smiling—after we made all those wonderful pills and cell-phone plans!—what's wrong with you? Not to smile is un-American. You can pick out the Americans in a crowd of tourists by their reflexive grins. The U.S. enshrined in its founding document the right to the pursuit of happiness. So we pursued it and—at least as commerce defines it—we caught it.
Now, like the dog that chased and finally caught the car, we don't know what the hell to do with it. We feel vaguely dissatisfied though we have what we should want, vaguely guilty for wanting it, vaguely angry because it didn't come as advertised. People tsk-tsked over last month's study in which women reported being happier watching TV than playing with their kids. But why shouldn't they? This is how the market defines happiness. Happiness is feeling good. Kids, those who exist outside ads, make you feel bad—exhausted, frustrated, bored and poor. Then they move away and break your heart.
What we forget—what our economy depends on us forgetting—is that happiness is more than pleasure sans pain. The things that bring the greatest joy carry the greatest potential for loss and disappointment. Today, surrounded by promises of easy happiness, we need someone to tell us that it is O.K. not to be happy, that sadness makes happiness deeper. As the wine-connoisseur movie Sideways tells us, it is the kiss of decay and mortality that makes grape juice into Pinot Noir. We need art to tell us: remember that you will die, that everything ends, and that happiness comes not in denying this but in living with it. It's a message even more bitter than a clove cigarette, yet, somehow, a breath of fresh air.

单选题 According to the passage, great art describes all of the following EXCEPT ______.
A. nonconformity
B. depression
C. bitterness
D. total happiness
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】本题的出题点在转折处(yet)。第一段第二句指出,艺术家唯一的工作就是探讨各种情感,他们却选择把焦点放在情感糟糕的人身上。第一段段末又说,伟大的艺术从来不描写单纯而不带讥讽的快乐,故选D。
单选题 "Wordsworth's daffodils" in the second paragraph refers to ______.
A. one of Wordsworth's poems
B. a kind of flower that Wordsworth liked
C. art about happiness
D. art's inner controversy
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】本题的出题点在转折处(but)。第二段提到,最早的艺术形式原本是适于表达快乐的,但到了19世纪,越来越多的艺术家开始视快乐为乏味的、虚假的,或者糟糕的、令人厌倦的,于是艺术从“华兹华斯的黄水仙花”走到了“波德莱尔的恶之花”。由此推断,作者用“华兹华斯的黄水仙花”指代最早的那些表达快乐的艺术形式,故选C。
单选题 The tone of the author in the last but one paragraph is ______.
A. ironic
B. approving
C. indifferent
D. exaggerated
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】本题考查文章的基调。倒数第二段提到,女性在看电视时比和孩子一块玩时更加高兴,为什么不呢?这就是市场对高兴的定义:高兴就是感觉很好。孩子可跟广告不一样,他们会让女性难过、筋疲力尽、沮丧万分,而且总有一天他们会搬出家门,让人心碎。由此可见,表面上作者是在描述市场对高兴的定义,但事实上是在讽刺这一定义,故选A。
单选题 It can be concluded from the last paragraph that ______.
A. true happiness has within itself elements of bitterness
B. true happiness does not exist
C. no one needs true happiness
D. no one can get true happiness
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】本题的出题点在作者的观点处。最后一段指出,幸福不止是没有痛苦的快乐,带来最大快乐的事物也最有可能带来损失和失望,我们需要意识到不幸福也没有什么,忧愁能使幸福更深刻,A项内容符合原文,故选A。
单选题 The author takes a ______ attitude toward modem art's reflection of emotions.
A. positive B. negative C. detached D. critical
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】本题考查作者的写作态度,应着眼于全文。作者一直在探讨为什么现代艺术总是着眼于表达痛苦的感情,但是对于这种表达方式,作者并未作任何评价,故选C,detached意为“超然的,独立的”。