1、coverA Few Kind Words for SuperstitionUnit 5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 Obj
2、ectives Rhetorical skill:clarification with anecdotes and examples Key language&grammar points Writing strategies:classification and division Theme:superstition from different perspectives第3页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案Pre-R:picture activationWhats your sign?And do you believe in horoscope?Picture Activation|Pre-
3、questions第4页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案Pre-R:pre-questions-11.People are more or less superstitious.For example,we Chinese all think that the numbers“six”and“eight”can bring good luck,while“four”and“thirteen”are unfavoured numbers.Whats your favourite number?Why do you like it?Picture Activation|Pre-questionsOpe
4、n for discussion.第5页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案Pre-R:pre-questions-22.Its well known that different colours have quite different connotations in different cultures.For example,“yellow”in Chinese is associated with pornography,while in most English-speaking countries it connotes cowardice.Can you give some other
5、examples of this kind?Picture Activation|Pre-questionsOpen for discussion.第6页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:text introductionThe text is developed by means of the authors classification of the four types of superstition,and his explanation of its history,popularity and characteristics,and the reasons for peoples
6、 fascination with it.Davies uses a variety of examples in every paragraph,with the exception of the first two paragraphs,to develop the text.These examples include anecdotes,facts and personal experiences.In many of these examples we notice the words“a deeply learned professor,”“another learned prof
7、essor,”“Dr.Samuel Johnson,”“a good scientist.”All this helps to build the impression that superstition is not only for the naive and ignorant but it is also“alive and flourishing among the people who are indisputably rational and learned.”Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第7页综合教程6(第2版)
8、电子教案G-R:CN-transcendental meditation-1transcendental meditation (Paragraph 1)Transcendental meditation(超脱禅定法)is a technique of meditation derived from Hindu traditions that calms the mind and promotes deep relaxation through the use of a mantra(符 咒),a sacred verbal formula repeated in prayer,meditat
9、ion,or incantation(符 咒,咒 语),such as an invocation(祈祷)of a god,a magic spell,or a syllable or portion of scripture containing mystical potentialities.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第8页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-transcendental meditation-2Transcendental meditation is unique and fundamentall
10、y different from any other systems of meditation and relaxation.Over 5 million people around the world have learned the technique since it was founded by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in 1957.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第9页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-enlightmentenlightenment(Paragraph 1)In Hind
11、uism and Buddhism,enlightenment is the highest spiritual state that can be achieved.It is a blessed state in which the individual transcends desire and suffering and attains Nirvana,the ineffable ultimate in which one has attained disinterested wisdom and compassion.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|A
12、uthor|Structure第10页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Vain ObservancesVain Observances(Paragraph 3)An observance is an act performed for religious or ceremonial reasons.Here“vain”roughly means“proud.”Not walking under a ladder is a vain observance because people believe that they should not be humble in front of
13、the Devil.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第11页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-I ChingI Ching(Paragraph 4)The I Ching (or Book of Changes易经),is an ancient Chinese divination manual and book of wisdom that offers slightly ambiguous advice on how to act.Especially since the 1960s,its poetic text a
14、nd extraordinary symbolism to say nothing of its strange effectiveness in divination have gained it a following in the West.The I Ching was traditionally held to be written by the legendary Chinese Emperor Fu Hsi(伏羲)(2953 B.C.2838 B.C.).Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第12页综合教程6(第2版)电
15、子教案G-R:CN-I ChingIt is possible that the I Ching originated from a prehistoric divination technique which dates back as far as 5000 B.C.Further commentaries were added by King Wen and the Duke of Chou in the 11th century B.C.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第13页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Sa
16、muel JohnsonDr.Samuel Johnson(Paragraph 8)(17091784)English poet,essayist,critic,journalist,lexicographer,conversationalist,regarded as one of the outstanding figures of 18th century life and letters.Johnson became Doctor Johnson when Dublin University gave him the honorary degree in 1765.Text Intro
17、duction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第14页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Orthodox JewsOrthodox Jews(Paragraph 9)Orthodox Judaism(正统犹太教)is the branch of Judaism that is governed by adherence to the Torah(旧约首五卷,即摩西五经)as interpreted in the Talmud(塔木德经,犹太古代法典).It is the oldest form of Judaism practiced by Jews.Or
18、thodox Jews are Jews who believe in Orthodox Judaism.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第15页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-MelanesianMelanesian(Paragraph 9)Melanesia is a division of Oceania in the southwest Pacific Ocean comprising the islands northeast of Australia and south of the equator.It i
19、ncludes the Solomon Islands,New Hebrides,New Caledonia,the Bismarck Archipelago,various other island groups,and sometimes New Guinea.Melanesian is a member of any of the indigenous peoples of Melanesia.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第16页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-roman Catholic-1Roman Cat
20、holic(Paragraph 11)The Roman Catholic Church sees itself as instituted by Jesus Christ for the salvation of souls.It accomplishes this goal through teaching and through the administration of sacraments,including baptism,the Eucharist,and the forgiveness of sins,through which God grants grace to the
21、believer.The teaching authority or magisterium of the Church bases its teachings on both Scripture and apostolic tradition.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第17页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-roman Catholic-2As well as ordained secular clergy,the Church encourages monasticism,and has many orders
22、 of monks,friars and nuns who live in celibacy,and devote their lives entirely to God.Other religious practices include fasting,prayer,penance,pilgrimage and meditation.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第18页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Battle of the Boyne-1Battle of the Boyne(Paragraph 11)No y
23、ear in Irish history is better known than 1690.No Irish battle is more famous than the Battle of the Boyne.The Boyne is a river of eastern Ireland flowing about 113 km(70 miles)to the Irish Sea.In the Battle of the Boyne on July 1,1690,the armies of King William III(Prince of Orange,a Dutch-speaking
24、 Protestant)defeated the forces of James II(a Roman Catholic who had lost the throne of England in the bloodless“Glorious Revolution”of 1688),who fled to France.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第19页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-Battle of the Boyne-2The Battle of the Boyne is recalled each July
25、 in the celebrations of the Orange Order,not on the first day but on“the Twelfth,”for eleven days were lost with the change from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar in 1752.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第20页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-OrangemenOrangemen(Paragraph 11)In Northern Ireland,a
26、 solely Protestant organization called the Orange Order was founded in County Armagh,in 1795,in opposition to the Defenders,a Catholic secret society.It was a revival of the Orange Institution founded in 1688 to support William III of Orange,whose victory over the Catholic James II at the Battle of
27、the Boyne in 1690 has been commemorated annually by Protestants in parades since 1796.Orangeman is a member of one of the Ulster Protestant Orange societies founded in Northern Ireland in 1795 to maintain the political and religious ascendancy of Protestantism.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|
28、Structure第21页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:CN-gypsygypsy(Paragraph 12)A member of a race of people,originally from Asia,who travel around and traditionally live in caravans.Many gypsy groups have preserved elements of their traditional culture,including an itinerant existence,tribal organization,and the Romany
29、language.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第22页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:author bio-1Robertson Davies,one of Canadas foremost writers of plays,novels,and satire,was born on August 28,1913,in the small village of Thamesville,Ontario.He was educated at Upper Canada College,Queens University,and
30、earned a degree in literature from Oxford.After a few years in theatrical life,he shifted into journalism,as the literary editor of Saturday Night magazine,and later the editor of the Peterborough Examiner.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第23页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:author bio-2During this
31、period,he began to write plays,and then novels,starting with Tempest-Tost in 1951.He wrote 10 other novels,grouped into trilogies,as well as many plays.In 1961,Davies was appointed Master of Massey College at the University of Toronto,the post where he remained until his retirement.He died on Decemb
32、er 2,1995,at the age of 82.Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|Structure第24页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:structure analysis-1Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|StructurePart 1(Para 1-2)introductory part which tells of peoples different reactions to superstition and the rampant superstition among learned
33、 people.Part 2(Para 3-6)the author describes and explains one by one the four manifestations of superstition.Part 3(Para 7-8)the relationship of superstition and psychology,religion and science.第25页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案G-R:structure analysis-2Text Introduction|Culture Notes|Author|StructurePart 4(Para 9-11
34、)the persistent popularity of superstition and its reasonPart 5(Para 12)concluding remarks第26页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p0-textA FEW KIND WORDS FOR SUPERSTITIONRobertson Davies“A Few Kind Words for Superstition”originally appeared in Newsweek magazine(November 20,1978).Looking closely at why some people beli
35、eve in magic and chance,Davies divides superstition into categories for the purpose of analyzing this complex topic.The four divisions he presents are certainly familiar to most of us,though few of us have taken the time to label them.In taking a rational approach to what many people consider to be
36、an irrational subject,Davies offers some fascinating observations about human nature.Detailed Reading第27页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p1-text1.In grave discussions of“the renaissance of the irrational”in our time,superstition does not figure largely as a serious challenge to reason or science.Parapsychology,UFO
37、s,miracle cures,transcendental meditation,and all the paths to instant enlightenment are condemned,but superstition is merely deplored.Is it because it has an unacknowledged hold on so many of us?Detailed Reading第28页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p2-text2.Few people will admit to being superstitious;it implies na
38、vet or ignorance.But I live in the middle of a large university,and I see superstition in its four manifestations,alive and flourishing among people who are indisputably rational and learned.Detailed Reading第29页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p3-text3.You did not know that superstition takes four forms?Theologians
39、 assure us that it does.First is what they call Vain Observances,such as not walking under a ladder,and that kind of thing.Yet I saw a deeply learned professor of anthropology,who had spilled some salt,throwing a pinch of it over his left shoulder;when I asked him why,he replied,with a wink,that it
40、was“to hit the Devil in the eye.”I did not question him further about his belief in the Devil,but I noticed that he did not smile until I asked him what he was doing.Detailed Reading第30页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p4-text4.The second form is Divination,or consulting oracles.Another learned professor I know,who
41、 would scorn to settle a problem by tossing a coin(which is a humble appeal to Fate to declare itself),told me quite seriously that he has resolved a matter related to university affairs by consulting the I Ching.And why not?There are thousands of people on this continent who appeal to the I Ching,a
42、nd their general level of education seems to absolve them of superstition.Almost,but not quite.The I Ching,to the embarrassment of rationalists,often gives excellent advice.Detailed Reading第31页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p5-text5.The third form is Idolatry,and universities can show plenty of that.If you have e
43、ver supervised a large examination room,you know how many jujus,lucky coins,and other bringers of luck are placed on the desks of the candidates.Modest idolatry,but what else can you call it?Detailed Reading第32页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p6-text6.The fourth form is Improper Worship of the True God.A while ago
44、,I learned that every day,for several days,a$2 bill(in Canada we have$2 bills,regarded by some people as unlucky)had been tucked under a candlestick on the altar of a college chapel.Investigation revealed that an engineering student,worried about a girl,thought that bribery of the Deity might help.W
45、hen I talked with him,he did not think he was pricing God cheap because he could afford no more.A reasonable argument,but perhaps God was proud that week,for the scientific oracle went against him.Detailed Reading第33页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p7-text7.Superstition seems to run,a submerged river of crude reli
46、gion,below the surface of human consciousness.It has done so for as long as we have any chronicle of human behavior,and although I cannot prove it,I doubt if it is more prevalent today than it has always been.Superstition,the theologians tell us,comes from the Latin supersisto,meaning to stand in te
47、rror of the Deity.Most people keep their terror within bounds,but they cannot root it out,nor do they seem to want to do so.Detailed Reading第34页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p8-text8.The more the teaching of formal religion declines,or takes a sociological form,the less God appears to great numbers of people as
48、a God of Love,resuming his older form of a watchful,minatory power,to be placated and cajoled.Superstition makes its appearance,apparently unbidden,very early in life,when children fear that stepping on cracks in the sidewalk will bring ill fortune.It may persist even among the greatly learned and d
49、evout,as in the case of Dr.Samuel Johnson,who felt it necessary to touch posts that he passed in the street.The psychoanalysts have their explanation,but calling a superstition a compulsion neurosis does not banish it.Detailed Reading第35页综合教程6(第2版)电子教案DR-p9-text9.Many superstitions are so widespread
50、 and so old that they must have risen from a depth of the human mind that is indifferent to race or creed.Orthodox Jews place a charm on their doorposts;so do(or did)the Chinese.Some peoples of Middle Europe believe that when a man sneezes,his soul,for that moment,is absent from his body,and they ha
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