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(单词翻译)
MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:
Tom Wolfe created a new type of journalism1 over the course of his half-century career. Wolfe coined phrases that became part of the American lexicon2 in such nonfiction bestsellers as "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test," his account of fellow author Ken3 Kesey's psychedelic adventures, also "The Right Stuff" about the early years of the space program. Wolfe also wrote the best-selling novel "The Bonfire Of The Vanities." Wolfe died yesterday in a Manhattan hospital of undisclosed causes. He was 88 years old. Tom Vitale has this appreciation5.
TOM VITALE, BYLINE6: Tom Wolfe was an original. He was a star baseball player in his hometown of Richmond, Va., who had a tryout with the New York Giants. He was a novelist who didn't start with a character or a plot but an idea. In 1987, wearing his signature white suit, Wolfe told me how he began his first novel, a panoramic7 story of New York society.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
TOM WOLFE: I looked at the whole city first. And I wanted to do New York high and low. And I figured Wall Street could stand for the high end, and at the low end there would be what you find caught up in the criminal mechanism8 in the Bronx. And that once I zeroed in on these areas, I would then find the characters.
VITALE: The novel that grew out of Wolfe's research was the tale of Sherman McCoy, a wealthy bond trader who loses everything after a wrong turn in the South Bronx with his mistress in the passenger seat.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
WOLFE: (Reading) Two figures, two young men, black, on the ramp9 coming up behind him. Boston Celtics - the one nearest him had a silvery basketball warm-up jacket with Celtics written across the chest. He was no more than five or six steps away, powerfully built. His jacket was open, a white T-shirt, tremendous chest muscles, square face, wide jaws10, a wide mouth. What was that look? Hunter. Predator11.
VITALE: "The Bonfire Of The Vanities" was a huge critical and commercial success. Tom Wolfe had written the novel from the same you-are-there, stream of consciousness, first-person perspective that he pioneered in his nonfiction 20 years earlier.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
WOLFE: I've always contended, honestly, on a theoretical level that the techniques for fiction and nonfiction were interchangeable, and that the things that work in nonfiction would work in fiction and vice12 versa.
VITALE: Tom Wolfe began working as a newspaper reporter first for The Washington Post, then the New York Herald13 Tribune. He developed a unique style, incorporating literary techniques, interior monologues14, amped-up prose, eccentric punctuation15. It was called the New Journalism.
LEV GROSSMAN: It was a time when a lot of writers and a lot of artists in general I think were turning inward. And Wolfe didn't do that. Wolfe turned outwards16.
VITALE: Lev Grossman is the former book critic for Time magazine.
GROSSMAN: He was a guy who was interested in other people - how they thought and how they did things and how the things they did affected17 the world around them.
VITALE: Grossman says Wolfe not only wrote about other people...
GROSSMAN: He showed us how to walk into a cocktail18 party, a NASA training center, how to walk down the street and see in the world around us this incredible drama. And "The Right Stuff" was the book for me. It reminded me, in case I'd forgotten, that the world is an incredible place.
VITALE: In 1979, Wolfe published "The Right Stuff," an account of the military test pilots who became America's first astronauts. Four years later, the book was adapted as a feature film.
(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "THE RIGHT STUFF")
DAVID CLENNON: (As Liaison19 Man) Pretty soon every fighter jock, ever rocket ace4, every rat-racer in the country will be headed this way, each one of them wanting to push the outside of the envelope and get to the top of the pyramid.
VITALE: In "The Right Stuff," Wolfe popularized the phrase pushing the envelope. The title of Wolfe's nonfiction book about Leonard Bernstein's fundraiser for the Black Panthers, "Radical20 Chic," became a catchphrase for leftist liberals. In a New York magazine article, Wolfe dubbed21 the 1970s the Me Decade. Critic Lev Grossman says these phrases became part of the American language because they were dead-on.
GROSSMAN: It was because he was an enormously forceful observer. And he was not afraid of making strong claims about what was happening in reality. And people heard him, and they repeated what he said 'cause he was right.
VITALE: To get it right, Tom Wolfe said, first he did extensive research. Then he made an exhaustive outline.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
WOLFE: Then you can - I think you can start having fun. I like to use the technique of what I think of as a controlled trance. I'll actually sit in front of the typewriter, close my eyes, and then try to imagine myself into the particular scene. I give myself a quota22 each day of 10 triple-spaced pages on a typewriter. And that comes out to - for me anywhere from 1,600 to 1,800 words. That's not all that hard to do.
VITALE: All those words started a revolution in nonfiction that's still going on, says critic Lev Grossman.
GROSSMAN: Everything that bloggers have done for journalism - and I personally believe they've done a lot - Wolfe did it first. He did it 30 years earlier. And he did it better. And I think we're still catching23 up to him.
VITALE: Author Tom Wolfe died yesterday. For NPR News, I'm Tom Vitale in New York.
(SOUNDBITE OF BILL CONTI'S "THE RIGHT STUFF (SINGLE VERSION)")
1 journalism | |
n.新闻工作,报业 | |
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2 lexicon | |
n.字典,专门词汇 | |
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3 ken | |
n.视野,知识领域 | |
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4 ace | |
n.A牌;发球得分;佼佼者;adj.杰出的 | |
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5 appreciation | |
n.评价;欣赏;感谢;领会,理解;价格上涨 | |
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6 byline | |
n.署名;v.署名 | |
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7 panoramic | |
adj. 全景的 | |
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8 mechanism | |
n.机械装置;机构,结构 | |
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9 ramp | |
n.暴怒,斜坡,坡道;vi.作恐吓姿势,暴怒,加速;vt.加速 | |
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10 jaws | |
n.口部;嘴 | |
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11 predator | |
n.捕食其它动物的动物;捕食者 | |
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12 vice | |
n.坏事;恶习;[pl.]台钳,老虎钳;adj.副的 | |
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13 herald | |
vt.预示...的来临,预告,宣布,欢迎 | |
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14 monologues | |
n.(戏剧)长篇独白( monologue的名词复数 );滔滔不绝的讲话;独角戏 | |
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15 punctuation | |
n.标点符号,标点法 | |
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16 outwards | |
adj.外面的,公开的,向外的;adv.向外;n.外形 | |
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17 affected | |
adj.不自然的,假装的 | |
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18 cocktail | |
n.鸡尾酒;餐前开胃小吃;混合物 | |
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19 liaison | |
n.联系,(未婚男女间的)暖昧关系,私通 | |
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20 radical | |
n.激进份子,原子团,根号;adj.根本的,激进的,彻底的 | |
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21 dubbed | |
v.给…起绰号( dub的过去式和过去分词 );把…称为;配音;复制 | |
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22 quota | |
n.(生产、进出口等的)配额,(移民的)限额 | |
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23 catching | |
adj.易传染的,有魅力的,迷人的,接住 | |
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