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题目材料:
The early-nineteenth-century British economy did not experience a rapid and wholesale "industrial revolution," as scholars once claimed. Nevertheless, the more gradual and uneven picture that has emerged at the aggregate level should not disguise the fact that in some regions and industries dramatic discontinuities occurred, creating an economic configuration (and a cultural response) that became very different very quickly. Perhaps paradoxically, the recent scholarly emphasis on gradualism has placed focus on the 1830s as a decade of critical change, when economic development accelerated significantly and a recognizable "industrial" economy first became visible, with many industries and occupations rapidly evolving. Factories and machines did not become ubiquitous, but they became dominant images of the age and a powerful motor for the development of new social identities.
以上解析由 考满分老师提供。