2022年专业学位硕士研究生英语教程 5.pdf
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1、1 Unit 16 War Preview A photographers lens caught James Blake Miller smeared with blood and dirt during the battle for Falluja. In his eyes, America saw the steely determination that would bring victory in Iraq; now stress and divorce have made him a casualty of the war. Suffering from nightmares, p
2、anic attacks and survivors guilt, he has to fight against post-traumatic stress disorder and draws a disability pension. Text Reading Warm-up IThe pros and cons to the war. The Iraq War is an ongoing military campaign which began on March 19, 2003, with the invasion into Iraq by a multinational forc
3、e led by the United States and the United Kingdom. Please discuss the war with your partner. You can choose the words and expressions in the following ellipse: positive/ negative/ public opinion/ military operation/ terrorist/ troop withdrawal/ Saddam Hussein/ Bush Administration/ gain control of/ o
4、ccupy/ attack/ weapons of mass destruction/ coalition/ al-Qaeda ( 基地组织 ) / invasion/ occupy/ oilfields II. Reasons for the Iraq War. Put a tick in front of the statement(s) that you consider to be the real purpose(s) for Bush Administration to start the war. 1. For protecting the countrys vast oil f
5、ields from falling under the control of terrorist extremists. 2. For building a free Iraq. 3. For removing Saddam. 4. For helping Israel. 5. For getting control of and gaining profit from oil. 6. Because Iraqi regime treats its people horribly. 7. For getting out of the base in Arabia. 8. As part of
6、 a defensive war against Al Qaeda. 9. For helping the Iraqis. 10. Because of Iraqs alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction. Text A Picture Made him a Hero, Then His Life Fell Apart Paul Harris 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 1 页,共 13 页 - - -
7、- - - - - - 2 1 Combat can change a life in a second. The snap of a snipers bullet or the blast of a bomb will instantly end it or turn a healthy body into a maimed wreck. But for US marine James Blake Miller what changed his life was the sudden shutter click of a war photographers camera. 2 On a ro
8、oftop in Falluja, Miller was captured in a picture that has become one of the enduring images of the Iraq war. It showed his wan face, streaked with mud and blood, in a moment of reflection. His eyes stared out, tired yet determined. From his lips drooped a cigarette, curling a wisp of thin pale smo
9、ke. 3 That moment saw Miller, an ordinary soldier from the hills of Kentucky, turn into Marlboro Man, an everyday American hero. 4 The image hit the world on 10 November, 2004, as US marines stormed into Falluja to try to end a war that was supposed to have finished more than a year earlier. It appe
10、ared on newspaper front pages and made (became) the cover of Time. 5 Millers image became a symbol of steely resolve, of weary-yet-determined struggle, of the toughness of the American fighting man having a cigarette break (rest) before finishing the job. It captured a moment when most Americans sti
11、ll thought the invasion of Iraq a worthy undertaking. 6 Now Miller is a different symbol in a different time. As the war has dragged on, Millers life has collapsed in the face of post-traumatic stress disorder. He draws a disability pension for his condition and his personal life is a wreck. He suff
12、ers from nightmares, panic attacks and survivors guilt. Despite the immense goodwill of a grateful nation, Miller has slumped into struggle and despair. Last week came the news that he and his childhood sweetheart, Jessica, were getting divorced. 7 Marlboro Man is no longer an icon for the American
13、warrior ethic. He is a symbol of pain and suffering and the enormous problems endured by veterans returning home. No longer the victor, he has become the public face of shell-shock, one of the wars victims. 8 In the Appalachian hills which Miller calls home, the word for grandfather is papaw. Miller
14、s step-papaw, Joe Lee, was a Vietnam veteran. In interviews, Miller has described how Papaw Joe Lee would get drunk and tell war stories. Then Papaw would get upset and tearful at the memories of death and killing in Vietnam. 9 It was classic post-traumatic behavior, going undiagnosed. It was also a
15、 scene played out across America in the wake of Vietnam as hundreds of thousands of disturbed and troubled veterans returned home. Now those scenes are happening again as the veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan return to wives, husbands, partners and families, carrying psychological scars hidden by the
16、ir apparently healthy bodies. 10 Post-traumatic stress disorder is not an easy condition to treat. It is tough to deal with and requires a wide range of possible approaches, on an individuals circumstances. They involve flashbacks, panic attacks and paranoia. Under such disorder, persons behavior ch
17、anges, and sufferers can become violent to their loved ones. It destroys lives, often bringing on divorce, bankruptcy and suicide. 11 The story of how Miller became one of many sufferers is probably typical. It is only widely known because of the profile that becoming Marlboro Man gave him. Miller a
18、rrived in Iraq with his marine unit and was sent to the restive Anbar province. On 5 November, 2004, in the 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 2 页,共 13 页 - - - - - - - - - 3 middle of a sandstorm, word filtered through that his unit was to join the attack
19、 on Falluja. The assault began three days later. 12 He has never fully described the events of the next few weeks, but has let slip details which are horrifying enough. There were ambushes and firefights. He has described his horror at seeing a cat make a home in the open chest cavity of a dead Iraq
20、i. He lost his close friend, Demarkus Brown. Miller knows what it is like to look down a gun barrel at another human being and pull the trigger. You can make out a guys eyes, he told one interviewer. 13 After the war Miller took it as a personal mission to use his fame to highlight the stresses that
21、 veterans face when suffering with post-traumatic stress. He spoke out in the press and teamed up with the National Mental Health Association. He spoke to politicians on Capitol Hill in Washington. He became a force for not forgetting what Americas returning veterans had gone through. 14 After his t
22、our was up, Miller returned to Pike County and the tiny hamlet of Jonancy where his family had lived practically since the area was first settled by Europeans. The signs of trouble quickly emerged. Friends and relatives found him quick to anger. Jessica complained he would tighten his arm around her
23、 neck at night. 15 Once, on a trip to the county seat of Pikeville, he hallucinated that he saw the body of a dead Iraqi sprawled out on the ground. He took long and solitary motorbike rides, trying not to think about the war. He spoke of his guilt at having survived while many of his comrades did n
24、ot. 16 It is like a big guilt trip, day in and day out. I just lie there and rot, he told one interviewer. It was classic survivors guilta common emotion in many people who have survived traumatic experiences, whether it is combat or a train wreck. Those around him did not know how to deal with him.
25、 17 Miller was not given the chance to heal when his tour of duty in Iraq was over. Instead he was sent to New Orleans. Hurricanes Katrina and Rita had left the city burning, flooded and being looted. Waiting offshore in a troop transport, it appeared to Miller as if he were returning to urban comba
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