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Unit 11

Unit 11. The Future of the English By J. B. Priestley Lecturer: Meng Fanyan. Teaching Aims. 1)Improving students ’ ability to read between lines and understand the text properly; 2) Cultivating students ’ ability to make a creative reading;

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Unit 11

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  1. Unit 11 • The Future of the English • By J. B. Priestley • Lecturer: Meng Fanyan

  2. Teaching Aims • 1)Improving students’ ability to read between lines and understand the text properly; • 2) Cultivating students’ ability to make a creative reading; • 3)Enhancing students’ ability to appreciate the text from different perspectives; • 4)Helping students to understand some difficult words and expressions; • 5)Helping students to understanding rhetorical devices; • 6) Encouraging students to voice their own viewpoint fluently and accurately .

  3. Teaching Contents • 1. Background Knowledge • 2. Exposition and Argument • 3. Detailed Study of The Essay • 4. Organization Pattern • 5. Style and Language Features

  4. Time allocation • 1. Background knowledge (15 min.) • 2. Detailed study of the text (180 min.) • 3. Structure analysis (15 min.) • 4. Language appreciation (15 min.) • 5. Free talk (30 min)

  5. I. Background Knowledge • J. B. Priestley: Background Knowledge About the Author and His Works 1) A brief introduction to the author, Priestley: www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Jpriestley.htm2) AdmassThe whole system of an increasing productivity, plus inflation, plus a rising standard of material living, plus high-pressure advertising and salesmanship, plus mass communications, plus cultural democracy and the creation of the mass mind, the mass man the part of society that can be influenced by advertising or publicity

  6. J. B. Priestley • John Boynton Priestley • --- born in Bradford, England, in 1894 • --- died in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1984

  7. J. B. Priestley • --- British journalist • --- novelist • --- playwright • --- essayist • Priestley's output was vast and varied - he wrote over one hundred novels, plays, and essays.

  8. J. B. Priestley • His best-known play: • An Inspector Calls (1946) • his novels: • The Good Companions (1929) • Angel Pavement (1930) • established him as a successful popular novelist.

  9. J. B. Priestley • Other novels: • They Walk in the City (1936) • The Doomday Men (1938) • Let the People Sing (1939) • Festival at Farbridge (1951)

  10. J. B. Priestley • --- more successfully than any other novelist in the first half of the 20th century • --- thoughts and feelings of the ordinary Englishman • --- a being whose character he outlines with vigor and good humor

  11. II. Introduction to the Passage • 1. Type of literature: • part exposition and part persuasion or argument

  12. II. Introduction to the Passage • Exposition is an explanation of facts which something is done, to make other people understand. • Argument is an attempt to lead other people to believe our opinion and induce them to adopt this opinion as their own.

  13. For further information, connect to http://homepages.iol.ie/~laoistec/LENGLISH/lpers.html> • Difference between exposition and argument Difference between persuasion and argument Honest persuasion and dishonest persuasion Formal argument and informal argument

  14. II. Introduction to the Passage • 2.  The thesis: • stated in the title of the essay • The future of the English

  15. II. Introduction to the Passage • The writer is trying to explain the future of the English people but he doesn’t really state what that future is going to be.

  16. II. Introduction to the Passage • The future depends on the outcome of the struggle between their Englishness and Admass. • --- the workers and union bosses • --- the men and women in the professional class • --- the young • --- political leaders • --- Englishness

  17. II. Introduction to the Passage • 3.  The structural organization of this essay: • --- loose • --- informal • --- illogical • --- emotional

  18. II. Introduction to the Passage • The central topic: The English are different • ---Instinctive feeling and not rational thought • --- not at home in the contemporary world • --- deeply suspicious of change for change’s sake • --- feel bored and enjoy dramatic change • --- sense of community • --- imaginative people

  19. II. Introduction to the Passage • --- P.4, 5 or 6 points of the argument around the central topic • --- insufficient evidence to support the writer’s position, and his reasoning on some points not logically sound • --- a quite informal piece of argument which appeals more to the emotion of his English readers

  20. Detailed Study of The Essay • 1. The dominant intention or the controversial topic of his argument is stated early in paragraph one in one unambiguous sentence: “ The English are different”. 1) It is instinctive feeling and not rational thought that shapes and colours actual events in England.“ Englishness again”

  21. — an inserted elliptical phrase standing for perhaps: This shows their Englishness again.“Below the noisy arguments, the abuse and the quarrels, there is a reservoir of instinctive fellow – feeling”— The English people may hotly argue and abuse and quarrel with each other but there still exists a lot of natural sympathetic feeling for each other. “Some cancer in their character has eaten away their Englishness”figure of speech:___________. Compare ________ to _______.

  22. 2) The English do not feel at home in the contemporary world, representing the accelerated development of our whole age. They are suspicious of largeness, severe efficiency and admass.“ Along with the demand for bigness goes a demand for severe efficiency, often quite rational but not reasonable, therefore alien to Englishness.”— Along with the demand for bigness, there is also a demand for strict and demanding efficiency. This is often the product of cold logical thinking but not sensible. Therefore it is opposed or repugnant to Englishness.

  23. 3) The English are also deeply suspicious of change for change’s sake.4) The English can soon feel bored and that’s why they gamble and booze so much and enjoy any dramatic change in public life.5) The English have a sense of community, decent fellow feeling, fairness.6) The English are at heart and at root an imaginative people immediately responsive to any suggestion of drama in their lives.

  24. 2. The Future of the English hangs on1) The final result of a battle between Admass and Englishness.The striking contrast between admass and Englishness to show how inevitable the battle is.

  25. Admass • 1.Already conquered most of the western world2.receive vast subsidies of dollars, francs, Deutschmarks and the rest for public relations and advertising campaigns3.offers more and more things for more and more money ,creates the so-called “Good Life”4.operates in the outer visible world5.a poster in full colour

  26. Englishness • 1.ailing and impoverished2.in no position to receive vast subsidies of dollars, francs, Deutschmarks and the rest for public relations and advertising campaigns3.offers states of mind in place of that rich variety of thins4.belong to the invisible inner world5.a poor shadowy show, a faint pencil sketch

  27. “ Against this, at least superficially, Englishness seems a poor shadowy show — a faint pencil sketch beside a poster in full colour …”Shadowy show: ____________.The conflict between Admass and Englishness.

  28. Admass: What is central to Admass is the production and consumption of goods.Dissatisfaction is embedded in AdmassRuthless competitiveness Take man only as a producer and consumerDependence upon dissatisfaction, greed and envy

  29. Englishness: With its relation to the unconsciousDependence upon instinct and intuitionAdherence to the past and deep long rootsNot hostile to change and deeply suspicious of change for change’s sakeRejecting being committed to some inevitable mechanical progress

  30. While Englishness can still fight on, Admass could be winning.Reason: Not all the English hold fast to EnglishnessSome important and influential men carefully train themselves out of itA horde of others, shallow and foolish, wander away form itThe spirits of age is working for AdmassMost of what we read and what we hear is working for AdmassInflation proved that we need more and not less Admass

  31. 2) The Future of the English rests upon the decision made by English workers together with the people on the management side who will have to put an end to the conflict between Admass and Englishness.3) The Future of the English hangs upon men and women who are strong-minded enough to hold the Englishness and reject Admass

  32. 4) The Future of the English depends upon the quieter young, who under the influence of one or two of those professional men and women, far-sighted enough to think what life would be like in the future. • 5) The Future of the English can not depends on the SLOOPY PEOPLE

  33. 3. Boredom is a MENACE. • Heavily industrially society • ↓ • offer boring work shatter slow rhythms, crowd and excite people by • traditional skills, closely knit promises that cannot be kept • communities of rural societies • ↓ • boredom • ↓ • idiot vandalism, frustration, ferocious robbery with violence, vicious criminality

  34. 4. English is still with us. But it needs reinforcement, extra nourishment. 1) On a hidden level, there remains of a characteristically English sense of community, decent fellow feeling, fairness.2) Englishness cannot be fed with the east wind of a narrow rationality, the latest figures of profit and loss, a constant appeal to self-interest.

  35. 3) English are at heart and at root an imaginative people immediately responsive to any suggestion of drama in their lives.Question: “And this is true, whether they are wearing bowler hats or ungovernable mops of hair.”The rhetorical device used in this sentence is __________.“bowler hats” is standing for ___________.“ungovernable mops of hair” is standing for ___________.

  36. 5. The writer’s voiceTo face the future properly they need both a direction and a great lift of the heart. A rather poorer and harder way of life will not defeat them so long as it is not harder and poorer in spirit, so long as it still refuses to reject Englishness- for so many centuries the secret of the islanders oddity and irrationality, their many weaknesses, their creative strength.

  37. Oral Practice: Talking about the following questions • 1) Are there any special characteristics in Priestly’s diction? Pick out some words and idioms that you think are peculiar to British English.2)What is the dominant intention of this piece of argument? The proposition clearly stated?3)What conflicts or issues are put forward in this argument? Are all the conflicts resolved?

  38. 4)Does Priestly provide sufficient evidence to support his position?5)Is this reasoning sound? Are there any logical fallacies in his argument?6)How does the writer make use of emotional appeals? Cite some examples.7)Which paragraph do you like best? Give your reasons.

  39. Organization Pattern • 1) The thesis stated in the title of the essay 2) The structural organization of this essay: loose 3) A quite informal piece of argument which appeals more to the emotion of his English readers 4) Weakness: insufficient evidence to support the writer’s position, and his reasoning on some points not logically sound

  40. Style and Language Features • 1) Smooth and polished 2) Readable and informal 3) It is the instinctive and intuitive feelings not rational reasoning that shape and colors the style of the essay.4) Use of various rhetorical devices • Connect to http://www.megabrands.com/carroll/faq3.htmlto get specific information on rhetorical devices

  41. Words and expressions • Cosmopolitan – representative of all or many parts of the world • n. 四海为家的人, 世界主义者 • adj. 世界性的,全球(各地)的 • cosmopolitanism • n. 世界大同主义, 四海一家 • cosmopolitanize • v.使大同化, 使国际化

  42. Words and expressions • English • adj. 英文的, 英国人的, 英格兰的 • n. 英国人, 英语 • Englisher • n.英国人,将另一种文字译成英文者,英语译者 • Englishism n. 英国风格, 英语语法, 英国精神 • Englishize vt. 英国化 • Englishness n.英国风格, 英国人作风

  43. Words and expressions • neo-[ni:EJ] • 表示“新, 新近”之义 • Neo-Darwinism • n. 新达尔文主义 • Neo-Nazism • 新纳粹主义 • Fascist • 法西斯主义的, 法西斯主义者的, 法西斯主义者

  44. Words and expressions • scuffle[5skQfl] • v. 混战 • n. 混战 fist fights

  45. Words and expressions • fanatical[fE5nAtikEl] • adj. 狂热的, 盲信的 • fanatically • adv. 狂热地, 盲信地 • fanaticism • n. 狂热, 盲信 • fanaticize • v. 使狂热, 使产生盲从

  46. Words and expressions • A reservoir of instinctive fellow-feeling

  47. Words and expressions • snarl • vt. 使缠结, 搞乱, 咆哮着说 • n. 咆哮, 吼叫, 怒骂, 缠结, 混乱 • snarlingly • adv. 咆哮着,怒吼着

  48. Words and expressions • A reservoir of instinctive fellow-feeling--- • There still exists a lot of natural sympathetic feeling for each other

  49. Words and expressions • On the board or the shop floor--- • Governing board of a factory and workshop • There are not many snarling shop stewards in the workshop, nor are there many cruel wealthy employers on the board of managers

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