英:[senˈseɪʃənəlɪzəm]
美:[sɛnˈseʃənəˌlɪzəm]
英:[senˈseɪʃənəlɪzəm]
美:[sɛnˈseʃənəˌlɪzəm]
sen·sa·tion·al·ism
sen seI sh n lih zm
sensationalistic (adj.), sensationalist (n.)
词根:sensation
adj.sensational 轰动的;耸人听闻的;非常好的;使人感动的
n.sensation 感觉;轰动;感动
Noun
1. subject matter that is calculated to excite and please vulgar tastes
2. the journalistic use of subject matter that appeals to vulgar tastes;
"the tabloids relied on sensationalism to maintain their circulation"
3. (philosophy) the ethical doctrine that feeling is the only criterion for what is good
4. (philosophy) the doctrine that knowledge derives from experience
哲学上的“感觉是知识和思想的唯一来源的理论”始于1846年; 新闻学上的“旨在激发情感的写作或语言”始于1865年,源于 sensational 和 -ism。1856年出现了 Sensation novel(感官小说),威尔基·柯林斯的小说经常被引用为早期例子。
Sensation novels, novels that produce their effect by exciting and often improbable situations, by taking as their groundwork some dreadful secret, some atrocious crime, or the like, and painting scenes of extreme peril, high-wrought passion, etc. [Century Dictionary]
感官小说,小说通过激发并经常是不可信的情节,以某些可怕的秘密、可怕的罪行等为基础,并描绘极端危险、高度激情等场景来产生效果。[世纪词典]
感觉论
感觉主义
The first known use of sensationalism was in 1846
1 With countless outlets and platforms vying for attention, distinguishing credible reporting from sensationalism has become increasingly challenging.
2 She’s trying to tell him that it’s one thing to eschew sensationalism; it’s quite another to make a film that arouses no feelings at all.
3 But the sensationalism has, unfortunately, obscured some of the things we might be able to change, if we started talking about justice and equality more than we talk about certain doom.
4 Like shark attacks, our perception of the risk associated with these dogs has a lot to do with this kind of sensationalism.
5 While the amusement park setting enables Hand to ramp up the tension with a toolbox of strange and creepy people and places to play with, she never falls prey to pointless sensationalism.
6 Those who didn’t – because conservatism runs against screaming, extremism and sensationalism – began disappearing from the talk shows, magazines and store shelves.
7 On stage, Bonelli has always eschewed sensationalism for musical finesse and clarity, and it's his elegant technique that adds force to his acting in La Bayadère.
8 Mostly abstaining from easy sensationalism, they are laudably committed to the harder task of making dance work as dance, almost solely through abstraction rather than narrative.
9 It is a subject that would seem to lend itself to sensationalism and horrified indignation.
10 Originally intended to poke fun at the growing sensationalism of current affairs programming, The Day Today managed to predict frightening well the wall-to-wall news coverage now regularly inflicted on viewers.
11 The news is rash, coming from a sensationalism newspaper.
这样的报道是草率的,来自一个具有轰动效应的媒体。
12 Whatever Durst’s culpability, “The Jinx” became, by the miniseries’ end, a grotesque concatenation in which vigilante investigation was queasily merged with commercial sensationalism.
13 But how much can you trust films that blend high-minded outrage with a tabloid-savvy sensationalism?
14 The halo and caption strike me as cheap sensationalism.
15 But if you’re seeking an antidote to sensationalism, you might look to the world of documentary.
16 “But I hope that people will now understand that these reports were not just done for sensationalism.”
17 They were an accident of my distraction and a product of news sensationalism.
这是我一时分心的失误,也是新闻效应的产物.
18 She succeeds “in taking us to the darkest recesses of human behavior without a jot of sensationalism,” wrote Dominic Cavendish in the Daily Telegraph.
19 But does that also make it too nice to get attention in an art form that thrives on sensationalism?
20 In 1994, she made the bold and public decision to steer her show away from tabloid sensationalism and take it in a more empowerment-oriented direction.