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READING AND USE OF ENGLISH | SAMPLE PAPER 2
Part 6
CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: ADVANCED HANDBOOK FOR TEACHERS
You are going to read four extracts from articles in which academics discuss the contribution the arts
(music, painting, literature, etc.) make to society. For questions 37 – 40, choose from the academics
A – D. The academics may be chosen more than once. Which academic
Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. has a different view from North regarding the effect of the arts on behaviour towards
others? 37
The Contribution of the Arts to Society
has a different view from Konecki on the value of studying the arts compared to other
academic subjects? 38
A Lana Esslett
The arts matter because they link society to its past, a people to its inherited store of ideas, images and words;
yet the arts challenge those links in order to find ways of exploring new paths and ventures. I remain sceptical of expresses a different opinion to the others on whether the human species has a genetic
READING AND USE OF ENGLISH | SAMPLE PAPER 2
claims that humanity’s love of the arts somehow reflects some inherent inclination, fundamental to the human predisposition towards the arts? 39
race. However, exposure to and study of the arts does strengthen the individual and fosters independence in the
face of the pressures of the mass, the characterless, the undifferentiated. And just as the sciences support the
technology sector, the arts stimulate the growth of a creative sector in the economy. Yet, true as this is, it seems
to me to miss the point. The value of the arts is not to be defined as if they were just another economic lever to expresses a similar view to Esslett on how the arts relate to demands to conform? 40
be pulled. The arts can fail every measurable objective set by economists, yet retain their intrinsic value to
humanity.
B Seth North
Without a doubt, the arts are at the very centre of society and innate in every human being. My personal, though
admittedly controversial, belief is that the benefits to both individuals and society of studying science and
technology, in preference to arts subjects, are vastly overrated. It must be said, however, that despite the claims
frequently made for the civilising power of the arts, to my mind the obvious question arises: Why are people
who are undeniably intolerant and selfish still capable of enjoying poetry or appreciating good music? For me, a
more convincing argument in favour of the arts concerns their economic value. Needless to say, discovering
how much the arts contribute to society in this way involves gathering a vast amount of data and then evaluating
how much this affects the economy as a whole, which is by no means straightforward.
C Heather Charlton
It goes without saying that end-products of artistic endeavour can be seen as commodities which can be traded
and exported, and so add to the wealth of individuals and societies. While this is undeniably a substantial
argument in favour of the arts, we should not lose sight of those equally fundamental contributions they make
which cannot be easily translated into measurable social and economic value. Anthropologists have never found
a society without the arts in one form or another. They have concluded, and I have no reason not to concur, that
humanity has a natural aesthetic sense which is biologically determined. It is by the exercise of this sense that
we create works of art which symbolise social meanings and over time pass on values which help to give the
community its sense of identity, and which contribute enormously to its self-respect.
D Mike Konecki
Studies have long linked involvement in the arts to increased complexity of thinking and greater self-esteem.
Nobody today, and rightly so in my view, would challenge the huge importance of maths and science as core
disciplines. Nevertheless, sole emphasis on these in preference to the arts fails to promote the integrated
left/right-brain thinking in students that the future increasingly demands, and on which a healthy economy now
undoubtedly relies. More significantly, I believe that in an age of dull uniformity, the arts enable each person to
express his or her uniqueness. Yet while these benefits are enormous, we participate in the arts because of an
instinctive human need for inspiration, delight, joy. The arts are an enlightening and humanising force,
encouraging us to come together with people whose beliefs and lives may be different from our own. They
encourage us to listen and to celebrate what connects us, instead of retreating behind what drives us apart.