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A black-and-white photo from the early 1900s shows a woman in rural America, her face covered with a sinister white mask. In another, from 1930, a tall figure stands in a field tightly wrapped in what looks like a white sheet and black tape, while a 1938 image shows three people driving to a party in hair-raising skull masks. Halloween costumes from the first half of the 20th century were terrifying. Drawing on the holiday's pagan and Christian roots -- as a night to ward off evil spirits or reconcile with death, respectively -- people often opted for more morbid, serious costumes than the pop culture-inspired ones of today, according to Lesley Bannatyne, an author who has written extensively about the history of Halloween. Intimate photos of modern-day witches across America "Before it evolved into the family-friendly, party occasion we know it as, October 31 was deeply linked to ghosts and superstitions," she said in a phone interview. "It was seen as a day 'outside of normal,' when you act outside of society's norms. "Wearing ghoulish costumes -- not horror-inspired like today's, but plain frightful -- was an essential part of it." Ancient roots The genesis of Halloween costumes may date back over 2,000 years. Historians consider the Celtic pagan festival of Samhain, which marked summer's end and the beginning of the year's "darker" half in the British Isles, to be the holiday's precursor. It was believed that, during the festival, the world of the gods became visible to humans, resulting in supernatural mischief. Some people offered treats and food to the gods, while other wore disguises -- such as animal skins and heads -- so that wandering spirits might mistake them for one of their own. "Hiding behind their costumes, villagers often played pranks on one another, but blamed the spirits," Bannatyne said. "Masks and cover-ups came to be seen as means to get away with things. That's continued throughout Halloween's evolution." Christianity adopted October 31 as a holiday in the 11th century, as part of efforts to reframe pagan celebrations as its own. Indeed, the name "Halloween" derives from "All Hallows Eve," or the day before All Saints' Day (November 1). But many of the folkloristic aspects of Samhain were incorporated and passed on -- costumes included. In medieval England and Ireland, people would dress up in outfits symbolizing the souls of the dead, going from house to house to gather treats or spice-filled "soul cakes" on their behalf (a Christian custom known as "souling"). From the late 15th century, people started wearing spooky outfits to personify winter spirits or demons, and would recite verses, songs and folk plays in exchange for food (a practice known as "mumming"). American influence As the first wave of Irish and Scottish immigrants began arriving in the US in the 18th century, Halloween superstitions, traditions and costumes migrated with them. Once Halloween entered American culture, its popularity quickly spread, according to fashion historian and director of New York University's costume studies MA program, Nancy Diehl. "People in rural America really embraced its pagan roots, and the idea of it as a dark occasion, centered around death," she said in a phone interview. "They wore scary, frightening get-ups, which were made at home with whatever was on hand: sheets, makeup, improvised masks. "Anonymity was a big part of the costumes," she added. "The whole point of dressing up was to be completely in disguise." By the 1920s and 1930s, people were holding annual Halloween masquerades, aimed at both adults and children, at rented salons or family homes. Costume preparations sometimes began as early as August, according to Bannatyne. Falling right between summer and Christmas, the celebration also seemed to benefit from its timing in the calendar. "It was a way to come together before the turning of the season," Deihl said. "Marketers played heavily on that as Halloween became more commercialized." Those same decades also saw the emergence of costumes influenced by pop culture, alongside the first major costume manufacturing companies. The J. Halpern Company (better known as Halco) of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, began licensing images of fictional characters like Popeye, Olive Oyl, Little Orphan Annie and Mickey Mouse around this time, according to Bannatyne. "People also became fascinated with impersonating characters at the fringe of society," she said, adding that pirates, gypsies and even homeless people became common outfit choices. Continuing the tradition of old practices like souling and mumming, Halloween pranks became a common phenomenon in North America -- sometimes to the point of vandalism and rioting. By the mid-1940s, the press had dubbed the night's anarchy (or its broken fences and smashed windows, at least) the "Halloween problem" -- and costumes may have "partly enabled that behavior," Bannatyne said. In an effort to discourage criminal damage, local and national officials attempted to recast the holiday -- and dressing up for it -- as an activity for younger children. The Chicago City Council even voted in 1942 to abolish Halloween and establish "Conservation Day" on October 31 instead. "Throughout its history, Halloween has gone through changes of ownership," said Anna-Mari Almila, a sociology research fellow at the London College of Fashion, over the phone. "Its original connection to death became more and more tenuous, which made space for altogether different kinds of (costumes)." After World War II, as TV brought pop culture into family homes, American Halloween costumes increasingly took after superheroes, comic characters and entertainment figures. They also became increasingly store-bought: By the 1960s, Ben Cooper, a manufacturing company that helped turn Halloween into a pop phenomenon, owned 70 to 80 percent of the Halloween costume market, according to Slate .
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【判断题】极光是电流通过稀薄的气体时,电子撞击气体的分子或原子而发生的发光现象。大多数极光出现在地球南北两极上空90-130千米处。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】某女,30岁,输卵管结扎术后1年,停经35天,间断阴道流血5天,今晨大便时,突感下腹撕裂样疼痛,头晕、眼花,送至医院时,BP10.6/6.7kPa(80/50mmHg),面色蜡黄,四肢冰冷,脉细速,后穹窿穿刺抽出不凝血50ml,诊断为输卵管妊娠。其最主要的护理诊断为()
A.
知识缺乏
B.
疼痛
C.
组织灌注量不足
D.
有感染的危险
E.
组织受损的危险
【单选题】某女, 30 岁,输卵管结扎术后 1 年, 停经 35 天,间断阴道流血 5 天,今晨大便时,感下腹撕裂样疼痛,头晕、 眼花,送至医院时, BP80/50mmHg ,面色腊黄,肢冰冷,脉细速,后穹隆穿刺抽出不凝血 5ml ,诊断为输卵管妊娠。 作为护士,首先为患者采取的措施是
A.
建立静脉通路
B.
吸氧
C.
抽血送化验
D.
通知手术室
E.
导尿
【单选题】极光出现在哪个层结?
A.
对流层
B.
平流层
C.
中间层
D.
热层
【单选题】某女,30岁,输卵管结扎术后1年,停经35天,间断阴道流血5天,今晨大便时,突感下腹撕裂样疼痛,头晕、眼花,送至医院时,BP10.6/6.7KPa(80/50mmHg),面色腊黄,四肢冰冷,脉细速,后穹隆穿刺抽出不凝血5ml,诊断为输卵管妊娠。其最主要护理诊断为:
A.
知识缺乏
B.
疼痛
C.
组织灌注量不足
D.
有感染的危险
E.
组织受损的危险
【单选题】某女, 30 岁,输卵管结扎术后 1 年, 停经 35 天,间断阴道流血 5 天,今晨大便时,感下腹撕裂样疼痛,头晕、 眼花,送至医院时, BP80/50mmHg ,面色腊黄,肢冰冷,脉细速,后穹隆穿刺抽出不凝血 5ml ,诊断为输卵管妊娠。 其最主要护理诊断为:
A.
知识缺乏
B.
疼痛
C.
组织灌注量不足
D.
有感染的危险
E.
组织受损的危险
【简答题】美丽的极光出现在大气层的哪一层?
【单选题】极光出现在:
A.
中纬度地区
B.
赤道的附近
C.
太阳的两极
D.
地球的两极
【简答题】将含有C、H、O的有机物4.08g,装入元素分析装置,通入足量的O 2 使它完全燃烧,将生成的气体依次通过盛有氯化钙的干燥管A和盛有碱石灰的干燥管B。测得A管质量增加了2.16g,B管质量增加了10.56g。已知该有机物的相对分子质量为136。 (1)燃烧此化合物4.08g,需消耗氧气的质量是_______g (2)求此化合物的分子式_______ (3)根据有机物的性质确定其可能的结构简式: ①...
【判断题】极光出现在南北两极附近地区的高空,中国全境都看不到这种景观(   )
A.
正确
B.
错误
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