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Unit-6-Being-There省公共课一等奖全国赛课获奖课件.pptx

1、Unit 6 Being There新世纪高等院校英语专业本科系列教材(修订版)综合教程第六册(第2版)电子教案上海外语教育出版社南京信息工程大学 刘杰海第1页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案Contents pageContents Learning Objectives Pre-reading Activities Global Reading Detailed Reading Consolidation Activities Further Enhancement第2页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案objectivesLearning Objectives Rhetorical skill:t

2、ransferred epithet and rhetorical question Key language&grammar points Writing strategies:cohesive devices Theme:travel and mental health第3页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案Pre-R:picture activationPicture Activation|Pre-questionsWhat is the meaning of traveling?第4页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案Pre-R:Pre-questions-1Picture Activation|

3、Pre-questions1.When asked about our hobbies,eight out of ten people will mention traveling.Many are even mad about it.When traveling,we feel free both physically and mentally,especially mentally:no work,no boss,no assignment,no deadline.What a wonderful world!At the same time,we admire the magnifice

4、nce of natural landscapes,and enjoy the tranquility of the remote countryside as well as the convenience of the modern cities.There is no doubt that most of us have some kind of traveling experiences.So share one with the class.Open for discussion.第5页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案Pre-R:Pre-questions-2Picture Activa

5、tion|Pre-questions2.Inside every traveler,theres a dream place that he is dying to visit in his lifetime.We always hear people,especially young people,say that“When I have enough money,I will spend my holiday in”What is your dream place?Tell us where it is and why you want to go there.Open for discu

6、ssion.第6页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:text introductionThe text is basically composed of three topics:an examination of primary motivation for traveling,a discussion of travel writing that offers useful insights into the travelers psyche,and a description of the peculiar approach held by some travelers today.T

7、ext Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第7页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-FreudFreud(Paragraph 8)Sigmund Freud(18561939),Austrian neurologist.He founded psychoanalysis and was the first one to emphasize the significance of unconscious processes in normal and neurotic behavior.Text Introduction|Culture

8、Notes|Author|Structure第8页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Evelyn WaughEvelyn Waugh(Paragraph 15)Evelyn Arthur St.John Waugh(19031966),English novelist.His work was profoundly influenced by his conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1930.His works include Decline and Fall (1928)and Brideshead Revisited(1945).Text In

9、troduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第9页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Paul TherouxPaul Theroux(Paragraph 16)(1941)American writer.He wrote fiction works that include The Mosquito Coast(1982),My Other Life (1996),and Kowloon Tong(1997)and nonfiction travel books that include The Great Railway Bazaar (1975

10、)and The Pillars of Hercules(1995).Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第10页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Shiva NaipaulShiva Naipaul(Paragraph 16)Trinidadian writer;full name Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul(1932 ).His novels include A House for Mr.Biswas(1961)and A Bend in the River (1979).He wa

11、s awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第11页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Graham GreeneGraham Greene(Paragraph 16)(19041991)one of the most popular and critically acclaimed authors of the 20th century,a British editor,essayist,playwright and novelist.Greene

12、s most famous works include Brighton Rock(1938),The Quiet Americane (1955),Our Man in Havana(1958)and The Honorary Consul(1973).He had a long association with the movies,and was involved in This Gun for Hire(1942),The Third Man(1949)and Loser Takes All(1956).Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|St

13、ructure第12页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Phillip GPhilip Glazebrook(Paragraph 18)English novelist and travel writer.He is the author of Journey to Kars(1985).Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第13页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-James HolmanJames Holman(Paragraph 19)Known as the“Blind Traveler,”James Holma

14、n(17861857)was a British adventurer,author and social observer,best known for his writings on his extensive travels.Not only completely blind but suffering from debilitating pain and limited mobility,he undertook a series of solo journeys that were unprecedented both in their extent of geography and

15、 method of“human echolocation.”In 1866,the journalist William Jerdan wrote that“From Marco Polo to Mungo Park,no three of the most famous travellers,grouped together,would exceed the extent and variety of countries traversed by our blind countryman.”Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第1

16、4页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Author bioAnatole Broyard(19201990)African-American literary critic.He worked for The New York Times for forty years.His writings include Aroused by Books and Men,Women,and Other Anticlimaxes.He grew up in Brooklyn and attended the New School for Social Research.After serving

17、in World War II,he taught fiction writing at New York University and Columbia.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第15页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Structure AnalysisText Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|StructurePart 1(Para 1-11)an examination of primary motivation for travelingPart 2(Para 12-1

18、5)a discussion of travel writing that offers useful insights into the travelers psychePart 3(Para 16-20)a description of the peculiar approach held by some travelers today第16页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p1-textBEING THEREAnatole Broyard1.Travel is like adultery:one is always tempted to be unfaithful to ones ow

19、n country.To have imagination is inevitably to be dissatisfied with where you live.There is in men a centrifugal tendency.In our wanderlust,we are lovers looking for consummation.Detailed Reading第17页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p2-3-text2.Only while traveling can we appreciate age.At home,for Americans at east,

20、everything must be young,new,but when we go abroad we are interested only in the old.We want to see what has been saved,defended against time.3.When we travel,we put aside our defenses,our anxiety,and invite regression.We go backward instead of forward.We cultivate our hysteria.Detailed Reading第18页综

21、合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p4-text4.It is our best selves that travel,just as we dress in our best clothes.Only our passport reminds us how ordinary we actually are.We go abroad to meet our foreign persona,that thrilling stranger born on the plane.Were going to see in Europe everything we have eliminated or ed

22、ited out of our own culture in the name of convenience:religion,royalty,picturesqueness,otherness and passion.We cling to the belief that other peoples are more passionate than we are.Detailed Reading第19页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p5-text5.Theres an impostor in each of us why else would we put on dark glasses

23、 and try to speak and look like the natives of another place?At home,we impersonate ourselves;when were abroad,we can try to be what weve always wanted to be.In spite of all the recent talk about roots,many of us are tired of our roots,which may be shallow anyway,and so we travel in search of rootle

24、ssness.Detailed Reading第20页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p6-text6.Traveling began when men grew curious.The influence of the church,the traditional pattern of life,the lack of money and leisure had all restrained curiosity until the seventeenth century,when under pressure of scientific discoveries,the physical w

25、orld began to gape open.It was then that people began to travel in search of the profane.Detailed Reading第21页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p7-8-text7.Travel arrived together with sophistication,with the ability to see through or beyond ones own culture,with the modern faculty of boredom.Something of the Crusades

26、 survives in the modern traveler only his is a personal crusade,an impulse to go off and fight certain obscure battles of his own spirit.8.Of course,one of the most common reasons for traveling is simply to get away.Freud said that we travel to escape father and the family,and we might add the famil

27、iar.There is a recurrent desire to drop our lives,to simply walk out of them.Detailed Reading第22页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p9-10-text9.When we travel,we are on vacation vacant,waiting to be filled.The frenzied shopping of some travelers is an attempt to buy a new life.To get away to a strange place produces

28、a luxurious feeling of disengagement,of irresponsible free association.One is an onlooker,impregnable.10.We travel in summer,when life comes out of doors,and so we see only summery people,nothing of their sad falls,their long,dark winters and cruel springs.The places we visit are gold-plated by the

29、sun.The flowers and trees are like bouquets thrown to history.Detailed Reading第23页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p11-12-text11.And language what a pleasure to leave our own language,with its clichs stuck in our teeth.How much better things sound in another tongue!Its like having our ears cleaned out.So long as we

30、 dont understand it too well,every other language is poetry.12.Because we travel for so many reasons some of them contradictory travel writing is like a suitcase into which the writer tries to cram everything.At its most interesting,its a continual tasting,the expression of a nostalgia for the parti

31、cular.Its a childish game of playing countries,as we used to play house.Detailed Reading第24页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p13-text13.Travel writing describes a tragic arc:it begins with a rising of the spirit and ends in a dying fall.The earliest travelers went to see marvels,to admire the wonderful diversity of

32、 the world but the latest travelers are like visitors sitting at the bedside of dying cultures.Early travelers fell in love at first sight with foreign places but now we know only love at last sight,a kiss before dying,a breathing in of the last gasp.In some ancient societies,it used to be the custo

33、m for the son to inhale his fathers last breath,which contained his departing soul,and todays travelers do something like this,too.Detailed Reading第25页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p14-text14.Travel writing has become a quintessentially modern thing,the present regretting the past.We travel like insurance apprai

34、sers,assessing the damage.Militantly opposed to any kind of ethnic distinctions at home,we adore ethnicity abroad.Ironically,Americans need Europe more than Europeans do.To Parisians,for example,Paris is a place to live;for Americans,its a place to dream.Detailed Reading第26页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p15-text

35、15.“I do not expect to see many travel books in the near future,”Evelyn Waugh wrote in 1946.He saw the world turning into a“monoculture,”the sense of place giving way to placelessness.What Waugh didnt foresee was that travel books would change as novels and poetry have,that every slippage of culture

36、 would provoke its peculiar literature.He underestimated the variousness of our reasons for traveling.Detailed Reading第27页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p16-text16.There have always been travelers who went to look for the worst,to find rationalizations for their anxiety or despair,to cover their disillusionment w

37、ith labels,as steamer trunks used to be covered with them.Why else would Paul Theroux go to South America,which he so obviously detested?Shiva Naipauls worst fears were confirmed in Africa,just as his brothers were in Asia.Graham Greene spent four months traveling in the Liberian jungle as a private

38、 penance.Detailed Reading第28页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p17-text17.Even ruins have changed.Instead of the classical ruins of antiquity,we now have places that are merely“ruined.”And there are travelers who take a positive delight in them,who love awfulness for its own sake.For them,awfulness is the contempora

39、ry equivalent of the exotic.Its a negative sublime,a swoon or ecstasy of spoliation.Detailed Reading第29页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p18-text18.As other countries offer fewer exotic phenomena,the travel writer is forced to find the exotic in himself and the picturesque as well.The centrifugal tendency turns cen

40、tripetal,and modern travel books may be about the absence of things just as the classic books are about their presence.In Journey to Kars,Philip Glazebrook seems to have visited several unappealing villages in Turkey simply for the irony of being there.(Irony is the contemporary travelers drip-dry s

41、hirt.)One of the things a severely sophisticated traveler like Glazebrook seeks is a place where he himself can stand out in absolute relief.Detailed Reading第30页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p19-text19.Perhaps in the future we shall have to travel like James Holman,who,after being invalided out of the British na

42、vy because he had gone blind,set out in 1819 to see the world.Traveling mostly alone,speaking no foreign languages,using only public transport,Holman got as far as Siberia and returned home to publish in several thick volumes all that he had experienced.He rarely felt,he said,that he had missed anyt

43、hing through being blind.(At one point,he met a deaf man and they traveled together.)Detailed Reading第31页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p20-text20.Since he could not see,people often invited Holman to squeeze things as a way of perceiving them and this is what todays traveler has to do.He has to squeeze the place

44、s he visits,until they yield something,anything.Detailed Reading第32页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p1 AnalysisParagraph 1 AnalysisIn order to catch his readers attention,the author starts the essay with an unusual simile by comparing travel to“adultery”travelers are dissatisfied with their own countries and tempt

45、ed to visit others for excitement.Detailed Reading第33页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p2-3 AnalysisParagraphs 2-3 AnalysisIn these two paragraphs the author provides the example of Americans,who are used to“young,new”things in their own country but who are only interested in the old when they are abroad.Detailed R

46、eading第34页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p4-5 AnalysisParagraphs 4-5 AnalysisIn these paragraphs,the author points out that we tend to put on our best faade when we travel(“It is our best selves that travel.”)Detailed Reading第35页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p6-7 AnalysisParagraphs 6-7 AnalysisThe author explains when and why

47、 travel became popular.Detailed Reading第36页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p8-9 AnalysisParagraphs 8-9 AnalysisIn these two paragraphs the author cites the Freudian theory to explain why we travel to“get away,”that is to escape the familiar for“a luxurious feeling of disengagement.”Detailed Reading第37页综合教程6(第2版)电子

48、教案DR:p10-11 AnalysisParagraphs 10-11 AnalysisIn these paragraphs the author cites two examples to show that travel could refresh people:to see summery people and to hear things said in another tongue.Detailed Reading第38页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p12 AnalysisParagraph 12 AnalysisAfter enumerating some reasons

49、 for traveling,the author moves to the next related topic travel writing.Detailed Reading第39页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p13 AnalysisParagraph 13 AnalysisIn this paragraph the author compares“the earliest travelers”and“the latest travelers”in terms of their purposes.Detailed Reading第40页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p14 Ana

50、lysisParagraph 14 AnalysisIn this paragraph we learn that travel books reveal many interesting aspects of our self-contradictions:we live today but miss the past;we oppose“ethnic distinctions”at home but value them abroad.Detailed Reading第41页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR:p15-16 AnalysisParagraphs 15-16 AnalysisI

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