Unit-2-Space-Invaders综合教程四.ppt
《Unit-2-Space-Invaders综合教程四.ppt》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《Unit-2-Space-Invaders综合教程四.ppt(155页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、Watch the video and answer the following questions. How is the “getting through the door” movement understood by many people? Audiovisual supplementCultural informationMany view this apparently light-hearted tussle as a sign that Arafat and Barak were getting on well. Arafat and Barak are struggling
2、 to get through the door after the other party in order to show “I am in control”.2. What is the hidden message behind the scene?Body language is very important, but often complex and easily misunderstood.3. What does this story tell us?Audiovisual supplementCultural informationFrom Secret of Body L
3、anguageVoiceover: But body language is often complex, and easily misunderstood. Here, President Clinton leads the Israeli and Palestinian leaders Ehud Barak and Yasser Arafat up before the press during peace negotiations. Its all smiles for the cameras, but behind the faade of bonhomie, theres a pow
4、er struggle going on. Clinton jokingly explains that none of them will take any questions.Clinton: We promise to each other we will answer no question and offer no comments, so I have to set a good example. Voiceover: The body language then reveals just why that works.Expert A: Wow. Its almost a phy
5、sical fight. Audiovisual supplementCultural informationVoiceover: Many view this apparently light-hearted tussle as a sign that Arafat and Barak were getting on well. Think again. Expert A: There is a great meaning behind who goes through the door first. Now of course here in the West, letting someo
6、ne through the door first doesnt really matter. Polite maybe. But in the Middle East, it has significant cultural impact. Expert B: The host, the power person, says, “Im in control. Ill help you through the door. Ill show you the way.” Arafat: Thank you. Thank you.Voiceover: Throw in the fear and te
7、nsion present in most Middle East negotiations, and suddenly, the desire of Audiovisual supplementCultural information both Arafat and Barak not to go through that door before the other starts to make sense. Expert C: This is a classic example in its extreme way of how the last man through the door
8、is the winner. So Barak reaches for Yasser Arafat. Arafat literally grasps his arm, moves on, and starts waggling his finger at Barak, who, then, Barak, uses this opportunity as a wrestling match to move around, to actually be behind Arafat, and then literally grasps Arafat, holds him by the arm, an
9、d shoves him through the door.Expert B: So youve got fear and power struggle, showing in big big big big bold body language with it. Audiovisual supplementCultural informationPersonal space can be imagined as a kind of bubble surrounding a person that protects his or her privacy and which other peop
10、le may not normally enter. Allowing somebody to get very close and enter your personal space may be a sign of trust or love. On the other hand, intruding others personal space can be rather offensive.The amount of space people need to feel around them varies with various factors, such as culture, se
11、x, familiarity between people, crowdedness of the situation, etc. For example:Audiovisual supplementCultural information people from cultures that like a lot of personal space feel awkward and embarrassed when somebody comes too close to them; people of the same sex may sit or stand closer to each o
12、ther than to somebody of the opposite sex; strangers and casual acquaintances usually need more space than friends and members of the same family who know each other well; in a noisy street people may need to stand closer than they would normally, simply in order to hear each other. Audiovisual supp
13、lementCultural information In the text, the writer first points out the fact that nowadays people are more concerned about themselves and want to have a larger personal space than decades ago, and then he analyzes the causes of space invasion. The text can be divided into three parts. Part I (Paragr
14、aphs 1 2): The writer calls the readers attention to the invasion of personal space by relating an experience of how his personal space was invaded.Rhetorical featuresStructural analysisPart II (Paragraphs 3 7): The writer analyzes some likely causes of the shrinkage of personal space, and attribute
15、s the invasion of personal space to the general decline of good manners.Rhetorical featuresStructural analysisPart III (Paragraphs 8 9): The author presents his view about the essence of personal space, i.e. it is psychological, rather than physical, and urges people to “expand the contracting bound
16、aries of personal space”. A vivid and accurate description of the behaviour of the space invaders and those whose personal space is being invaded is achieved by a delicate selection of verbs. Some of the examples are as follows.Rhetorical featuresStructural analysis a man started inching toward me (
17、Paragraph 1) In elevators, people are wedging themselves in just before the doors close . (Paragraph 3) In movie theatres these days, people are staking a claim to both armrests, annexing all the elbow room . (Paragraph 7)Verbs and verbal phrases used to describe the behaviour of space invaders:Verb
18、s and verbal phrases used to describe the reaction of those whose space is being invaded: I minutely advanced toward the woman in front of me . (Paragraph 1) who absent-mindedly shuffled toward the white- haired lady ahead of him . (Paragraph 1)Rhetorical featuresStructural analysisPractice: Please
19、find more examples to illustrate the authors careful choice of verbs.Detailed readingSPACE INVADERS Richard Stengel 1 At my bank the other day, I was standing in a line snaking around some tired velvet ropes when a man in a sweat-suit started inching toward me in his eagerness to deposit his Social
20、Security check. As he did so, I minutely advanced toward the woman reading the Wall Street Journal in front of me, who, in mild annoyance, began to sidle up to the man scribbling a check in front of her, who absent-mindedly shuffled toward the white-haired lady ahead of him, until we were all hugger
21、-mugger against each other, the original lazy line having collapsed in on itself like a Slinky.Detailed reading2 I estimate that my personal space extends eighteen inches in front of my face, one foot to each side, and about ten inches in back though it is nearly impossible to measure exactly how fa
22、r behind you someone is standing. The phrase “personal space” has a quaint, seventies ring to it (“Youre invading my space, man”), but it is one of those gratifying expressions that are intuitively understood by all human beings. Like the twelve-mile limit around our national shores, personal space
23、is our individual border beyond which no stranger can penetrate without making us uneasy.3 Lately, Ive found that my personal space is being invaded more than ever before. In elevators, people are wedging themselves in just before the doors close; on the street, pedestrians are zigzagging through th
24、e human traffic, jostling others, refusing to give way; on the subway, riders are no longer taking pains to carve out little zones of space between themselves and fellow-passengers; in lines at airports, people are pressing forward like fidgety taxis at red lights.Detailed reading4 At first, I attri
25、buted this tendency to the “population explosion” and the relentless Malthusian logic that if twice as many people inhabit the planet now as did twenty years ago, each of us has half as much space. Recently, Ive wondered if its the season: T-shirt weather can make proximity more alluring (or much, m
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- Unit Space Invaders 综合 教程
限制150内