海外风情系列:Chinatown in New York 纽约唐人街



文件信息
文件来源
文件作者
更新时间 2005-5-15 12:13:04
添加编辑 viewsnake

辅助信息
打印功能 打印本文
背景颜色 杏黄 秋褐 胭红 芥绿 天蓝 雪青 炭灰 奶白
字体大小 特大号字 大号字 中号字 小号字
免责声明 本网站所有文章均来自网络,仅提供预览形式,不提供纸张形式,若涉及到版权的文章,请购买正版,毕竟在电脑上看也不舒服啊,呵呵,这是viewsnake个人网站,纯粹交流学习资料的地方。无商业行为。
选择更多免费考研资料:
阅读正文内容


On the surface, Chinatown is prosperous – a "model slum," some have called it – with the lowest crime rate, highest employment and least juvenile delinquency of any city district. Walk through its crowded streets at any time of day, and every shop is doing a brisk and businesslike trade: restaurant after restaurant is booming; there are storefront displays of shiny squids, clawing crabs and clambering lobster; and street markets offer overflowing piles of exotic green vegetables, garlic and ginger root. Chinatown has the feel of a land of plenty, and the reason why lies with the Chinese themselves: even here, in the very core of downtown Manhattan, they have been careful to preserve their own way of dealing with things, preferring to keep affairs close to the bond of the family and allowing few intrusions into a still-insular culture. There have been several concessions to Westerners – storefront signs now offer English translations, and Haagen Dazs and Baskin Robbins ice-cream stores have opened on lower Mott Street – but they can't help but seem incongruous. The one time of the year when Chinatown bursts open is during the Chinese New Year festival, held each year on the first full moon after January 19, when a giant dragon runs down Mott Street to the accompaniment of firecrackers, and the gutters run with ceremonial dyes.

Beneath the neighborhood's blithely prosperous facade, however, there is a darker underbelly. Sharp practices continue to flourish, with traditional extortion and protection rackets still in business. Non-union sweatshops – their assembly lines grinding from early morning to late into the evening – are still visited by the US Department of Labor, who come to investigate workers' testimonies of being paid below minimum wage for seventy-plus-hour work weeks. Living conditions are abysmal for the poorer Chinese – mostly recent immigrants and the elderly – who reside in small rooms in overcrowded tenements ill-kept by landlords. Yet, because the community has been cloistered for so long and has only just begun to seek help from city officials for its internal problems, you won't detect any hint of difficulties unless you reside in Chinatown for a considerable length of time


<<<返回上一页 <<<返回网站首页
<<<您的位置:首页>考研英语>其他英语>正文