Two recent publications offer different assessments of the career of the famous British nurse Florence Nightingale. A book by Anne Summers seeks to debunk the idealizations and present a reality at odds with Nightingale's heroic reputation. According to Summers, Nightingale's importance during the Crimean War has been exaggerated: not until near the war's end did she become supervisor of the female nurses. Additionally, Summers writes that the contribution of the nurses to the relief of the wounded was at best marginal. The prevailing problems of military medicine were caused by army organizational practices, and the addition of a few nurses to the medical staff could be no more than symbolic. Nightingale's place in the national pantheon, Summers asserts, is largely due to the propagandistic efforts of contemporary newspaper reporters.

By contrast, the editors of a new volume of Nightingale's letters view Nightingale as a person who significantly influenced not only her own age but also subsequent generations. They highlight her ongoing efforts to reform sanitary conditions after the war. For example, when she learned that peacetime living conditions in British barracks were so horrible that the death rate of enlisted men far exceeded that of neighboring civilian populations, she succeeded in persuading the government to establish a Royal Commission on the Health of the Army. She used sums raised through public contributions to found a nurses' training hospital in London. Even in administrative matters, the editors assert, her practical intelligence was formidable: as recently as 1947 the British Army's medical services were still using the cost-accounting system she had devised in the 1860's.

I believe that the evidence of her letters supports continued respect for Nightingale's brilliance and creativity. When counseling a village schoolmaster to encourage children to use their faculties of observation, she sounds like a modern educator. Her insistence on classifying the problems of the needy in order to devise appropriate treatments is similar to the approach of modern social workers. In sum, although Nightingale may not have achieved all of her goals during the Crimean War, her breadth of vision and ability to realize ambitious projects have earned her an eminent place among the ranks of social pioneers.


With which of the following statements regarding the differing interpretations of Nightingale's importance would the author most


Summers misunderstood both the importance of Nightingale's achievements during the Crimean War and her subsequent influence on British policy.

The editors of Nightingale's letters made some valid points about her practical achievements, but they still exaggerated her influence on subsequent generations.

Although Summers' account of Nightingale's role in the Crimean War may be accurate; she ignored evidence of Nightingale's subsequent achievement that suggests that her reputation as an eminent social reformer is well deserved.

The editors of Nightingale's letters mistakenly propagated the outdated idealization of Nightingale that only impedes attempts to arrive at a balanced assessment of her true role.

The evidence of Nightingale's letters supports Summers' conclusions both about Nightingale's activities and about her influence.

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正确答案:C。从阅读材料中可以看出,Anne Summers 将 Nightingale 的声誉放在夸大的地位,而编辑 Nightingale 的信件则强调她开创性的工作,包括期间之后和随后代以及为军队建立成本核算系统,而作者认为 Nightingale 的显著成就应被人们尊敬。因此,C 选项正确,它指出,尽管 Summers 的剖析可能正确,但她忽略了关于 Nightingale 后续成就的证据,证明她作为一位杰出的社会改革者的声誉是名副其实的。

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