Unit 4 Cultural Encounters Teaching plan综合教程二

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Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二Unit 4 Cultural Encounters 课文翻译综合教程二[注意:该文章为原创翻译,并非课文正文。

以下是对Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文的翻译综合教程的内容。

]在本单元中,我们将学习如何进行文化交流与理解。

这是一个重要的主题,因为在全球化的今天,不同文化之间的交往变得更加频繁。

然而,由于文化差异和语言障碍,很多时候我们可能会遇到困难。

因此,学习如何进行文化交往至关重要。

第一节:文化差异的意识在文化交流中,我们必须首先意识到文化差异的存在。

不同的国家和地区有着不同的价值观和行为准则。

比如,在中国,长辈和社会地位被重视,而在西方国家,个人自由和平等更为重要。

这些差异会导致在跨文化交流过程中的误解和冲突。

因此,我们应该学会尊重并包容不同的文化观念,并且努力理解和接受它们。

第二节:语言和交流语言是文化交流的核心。

使用正确的语言和表达方式可以避免很多不必要的误解。

在进行跨文化交流时,我们应该尽量采用清晰简明的语言,避免使用难以理解的俚语和幽默。

此外,我们还应该注意非语言交流,如身体语言和面部表情。

这些非语言元素可能在不同的文化中具有不同的含义,我们应该尽量避免产生歧义。

第三节:尊重和包容在文化交流中,尊重和包容是非常重要的。

对待不同文化的观念和习俗,我们应该保持开放和宽容的心态。

尽管我们可能对某些文化习俗感到陌生或者不理解,但我们不能妄加评判。

相反,我们应该倾听和理解不同文化的价值观和信仰,并尊重它们。

只有通过彼此的尊重和理解,我们才能更好地建立跨文化的友谊和合作。

第四节:文化交流的重要性文化交流对于个人和社会发展都具有重要意义。

通过与不同文化的交流,我们可以拓宽自己的视野,开阔思维,增加对世界的理解。

此外,文化交流还有助于促进和谐与团结。

通过深入了解和欣赏不同的文化,我们可以更好地跨越文化障碍,建立更紧密的关系。

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二精编资料

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二精编资料

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters Susan BassnettWe live in an age of easy access to the rest of the world. Cheap flights mean thatmillions of people are able to visit places their parents could only dream about, while the Internet enables us to communicate with the remotest places and the traditional postal services are now referred to almost mockingly as snail mail. When students go offback-packing, they can email their parents from Internet cafes in the Himalayas or from a desert oasis. And as for mobile phones —the clicking of text messaging at any hour of the day or night has become familiar to us all. Everyone, it seems, provided, of course, they can afford to do so, need never be out of touch.Significantly also, this great global communications revolution is also linked to the expansion of English, which has now become the leading international language. Conferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless of whether anyone present is a native English speaker. English has simply become the language that facilitates communication, and for many people learning English is an essential stepping stone on the road to success.So why, you may wonder, would anyone have misgivings about all these wonderful developments, and why does the rise of English as a global language cause feelings of uneasiness for some of us? For there are indeed problems with the communications revolution, problems that are not only economic. Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.Different cultures are not simply groups of people who label the world differently; languages give us the means to shape our views of the world and languages are different from one another. We express what we see and feel through language, and because languages are so clearly culture-related, often we find that what we can say in one language cannot be expressed at all in another. The English word homesickness translates into Italian asostalgia, but English has had to borrow that same word todescribe a different state of mind, something that is not quite homesickness and involves a kind of longing. Homesickness and nostalgia put together are almost, but not quite, the Portuguese saudade, an untranslatable word that describes a state of mind that is not despair, angst (English borrowed that from German), sadness or regret, but hovers somewhere in and around all those words.The early Bible translators hit the problem of untranslatability head-on. How do you translate the image of the Lamb of God for a culture in which sheep do not exist? What exactly was the fruit that Eve picked in the Garden of Eden? What was the creature that swallowed Jonah, given that whales are not given to swimming in warm, southern seas? Faced with unsurmountable linguistic problems, translators negotiated the boundaries between languages and came up with a compromise.Compromising is something that speakers of more than one language understand.When there are no words in another language for what you want to say, you makeadjustments and try to approximate. English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the colour spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range, since English hasfour words and Welsh has three. And even where words do exist, compromises still needto be made. The word democracy means completely different things in differentcontexts, and even a word like read which refers to a staple food item made of flourmeans totally different things to different people. The flat breads of Central Asia are along way away from Mother's Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word read has toserve for both.Inevitably, the spread of English means that millions of people are adding anotherlanguage to their own and are learning how to negotiate cultural and linguisticdifferences. This is an essential skill in today's hybrid world, particularly now when theneed for international understanding has rarely been so important. But even as morepeople become multilingual, so native English speakers are losing out, for they arebecoming ever more monolingual, and hence increasingly unaware of the differencesbetween cultures that languages reveal. Communicating in another language involves notonly linguistic skills, but the ability to think differently, to enter into another culture's mentality and shape language accordingly. Millions of people are discovering how tobridge cultures, while the English-speaking world becomes ever more complacent andcuts down on foreign language learning programmes in the mistaken belief that it isenough to know English.World peace in the future depends on intercultural understanding. Those best placedto help that process may not be the ones with the latest technology and state of the artmobile phones, but those with the skills to understand what lies in, under and beyond the words spoken in many different languages.文化冲突我们生活在一个交流非常便捷的时代。

Unit4 Cultural Encounters答案综合教程二

Unit4 Cultural Encounters答案综合教程二

Unit 4 Cultural EncountersKey to the ExercisesText comprehensionI.BII.1. T;2. F;3. T;4. T;5. T.III.1. “snail mail”.2. “an essential stepping stone on the road to success”.3. “the profound relationship between language and cultur e that lies at the heart of society”.4. “the means to shape our views of the world”.5. “to negotiate the boundaries between languages and to compromise in translation”.6. “to use linguistic skills, to think differently, to enter into another culture’s m entality and to shape language accordingly”.IV.1. The age we are living provides us with convenient ways to reach any part of the world.2. It seems that everyone is able to always get in touch with anyone else if he or she can afford to.3. is the most important to society.4. This is a fundamental skill in today’s world, where different cultures interact.5. Lots of people are finding ways to interrelate different cultures.Structural analysis of the text1. The last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: “Mo st fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.”2. Paragraph 4: The lack of an exact counterpart of the English word “homesickness” in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.Paragraph 5: The problem of untranslatability which the early Bible translators encountered.Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range; The word “democracy” means completely different things in different contexts; the flat breads of Central Asiaare a long way away from Mother’s Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word “bread” has to serve for both.VocabularyI. Phrase practice1. provided =as long as 假如,倘若need never be out of touch =can never fail to be reached 从不会失去联系2. regardless of =no matter 不管,不顾3. overlook at our peril =fail to notice at great risk 忽视……的危险或风险4. hovers somewhere in and around all those words =may be described by these words to varying degrees5. hit the problem of untranslatability head-on = were directly confronted with the problem that something in one language cannot be rendered into anotherII.1. stepping stone;2. at their peril;3. serve;4. mentality;5. staple;6. facilitating;7. messaging;8. hybrid.III. Word derivationFill in the blanks with the appropriate forms of the given words.1. economy2. accessible3. fundamentally4. homesick5. negotiable6. adjusted7. remoteness8. complacentlyIV.1. D;2. C;3. A;4. D;5. B;6. A;7. B;8. C.V. Synonym / AntonymGive a synonym or an antonym of the word underlined in each sentence in the sense it is used.1. Synonym: time, era, epoch2. Synonym: meetings3. Synonym: basic, fundamental4. Antonym: misshape5. Synonym: unavoidably6. Synonym: worry, concern, anxiety7. Antonym: hide, concealVI. PrefixWrite in each space one word that has the same prefix as underlined in the given word.1. unbelievable2. imperfect3. disagreement4. misplace5. malfunction6. enable7. surpass 8. submarineGrammarI. Complete the following sentences with the correct verb forms.1. helps2. hope; are enjoying; sunbathe; go; are going.3. is being.4. is typing5. am not eating.6. am reading7. are always leaving.8. go; belongs; wants; is using.9. is boiling.10. is putting; is rewiring; is building.II. Correct the errors.1. is passing → passes; is shooting → shoots.2. OK.3. are crying.4. OK.5. am knowing → know.6. am gathering → gather.7. work → am working.8. do → are; sneeze → sneezing.III.thank; are dispatching; regret; have; are contacting; hear; enclose/are enclosing; decide; have; are listed; regret; hope; enclose/are enclosing.IV.1. a. The speaker is complaining; b. The speaker gives a fact.2. a. am considering; b. have the opinion.3. a. It suggests a permanent nature; b. It suggests a temporary behaviour.4. a. is taking care of; b. have no objection to.5. a. am waiting for; b. believe.6. a. am waiting for; b. believe.V. Position of adjectivesRewrite the following descriptions putting the adjectives in the correct order.1. a large pair of red woolen socks2. a powerful new white German car3. a small rectangular grey Japanese radio4. a big modern concrete office building5. a medium size French stainless steel saucepan6. a superb medieval rose-shaped stained-glass window7. a prominent triangular red road sign8. a tiny black and white Chinese dogTranslationI.1.因此,你也许会问,为什么还有人会对这些绝妙的发展顾虑重重为什么英语成为世界语言会让一部分人惴惴不安2.不同的文化并不仅仅是给世界贴上不同标签的人群;语言给了我们塑造世界观的工具,而语言又是不一样的。

2-Unit4CulturalEncounters答案综合教程二讲课稿

2-Unit4CulturalEncounters答案综合教程二讲课稿

2-Unit4CulturalEncounters答案综合教程二讲课稿2-U n i t4C u l t u r a l E n c o u n t e r s答案综合教程二Unit 4 Cultural EncountersKey to the ExercisesText comprehensionI.BII.1. T;2. F;3. T;4. T;5. T.III.1. “snail mail”.2. “an essential stepping stone on the road to success”.3. “the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society”.4. “the means to shape our views of the world”.5. “to negotiate the boundaries between languages and to compromise in translation”.6. “to use linguistic skills, to think differently, to enter into another culture’s mentality and to shape language accordingly”.IV.1. The age we are living provides us with convenient ways to reach any part of the world.2. It seems that everyone is able to always get in touch withanyone else if he or she can afford to.3. is the most important to society.4. This is a fundamental skill in today’s world, where different cultures interact.5. Lots of people are finding ways to interrelate different cultures.Structural analysis of the text1. The last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: “Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.”2. Paragraph 4: The lack of an exact counterpart of the English word “homesickness” in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.Paragraph 5: The problem of untranslatability which the early Bible translators encountered.Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range; The word “democracy” means completely different things in different contexts; the flat breads of Central Asia are a long way away from Mot her’s Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word “bread” has to serve for both.VocabularyI. Phrase practice1. provided =as long as 假如,倘若need never be out of touch =can never fail to be reached 从不会失去联系2. regardless of =no matter 不管,不顾3. overlook at our peril =fail to notice at great risk 忽视……的危险或风险4. hovers somewhere in and around all those words =may be described by these words to varying degrees5. hit the problem of untranslatability head-on = were directly confronted with the problem that something in one language cannot be rendered into anotherII.1. stepping stone;2. at their peril;3. serve;4. mentality;5. staple;6. facilitating;7. messaging;8. hybrid.III. Word derivationFill in the blanks with the appropriate forms of the given words.1. economy2. accessible3. fundamentally4. homesick5. negotiable6. adjusted7. remoteness8. complacentlyIV.1. D;2. C;3. A;4. D;5. B;6. A;7. B;8. C.V. Synonym / AntonymGive a synonym or an antonym of the word underlined in each sentence in the sense it is used.1. Synonym: time, era, epoch2. Synonym: meetings3. Synonym: basic, fundamental4. Antonym: misshape5. Synonym: unavoidably6. Synonym: worry, concern, anxiety7. Antonym: hide, concealVI. PrefixWrite in each space one word that has the same prefix as underlined in the given word. 1. unbelievable 2. imperfect3. disagreement4. misplace5. malfunction6. enable7. surpass 8. submarineGrammarI. Complete the following sentences with the correct verb forms.1. helps2. hope; are enjoying; sunbathe; go; are going.3. is being.4. is typing5. am not eating.6. am reading7. are always leaving.8. go; belongs; wants; is using.9. is boiling.10. is putting; is rewiring; is building.II. Correct the errors.1. is passing → passes; is shooting → shoots.2. OK.3. are crying.4. OK.5. am knowing → know.6. am gathering → gather.7. work → am working.8. do → are; sneeze → sneezing.III.thank; are dispatching; regret; have; are contacting; hear; enclose/are enclosing; decide; have; are listed; regret; hope; enclose/are enclosing.IV.1. a. The speaker is complaining; b. The speaker gives a fact.2. a. am considering; b. have the opinion.3. a. It suggests a permanent nature; b. It suggests a temporary behaviour.4. a. is taking care of; b. have no objection to.5. a. am waiting for; b. believe.6. a. am waiting for; b. believe.V. Position of adjectivesRewrite the following descriptions putting the adjectives in the correct order.1. a large pair of red woolen socks2. a powerful new white German car3. a small rectangular grey Japanese radio4. a big modern concrete office building5. a medium size French stainless steel saucepan6. a superb medieval rose-shaped stained-glass window7. a prominent triangular red road sign8. a tiny black and white Chinese dog。

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters

Unit 4   Cultural Encounters

Unit 4 Cultural EncountersText Comprehension:IV.1.The age we are living in provides us with convenient ways to reach any part of theworld.2.It seems that everyone is able to get in touch with anyone else if he or she can afford to.3.…forms the core of society…4.This is a fundamental skill in today’s world, where different cultures interact.5.Lots of people are finding ways to interrelate different cultures.Translation:I.1 因此,您也许会问,为什么还有人会对这些绝妙的发展顾虑重重?为什么英语成为世界语言会让一部分人惴惴不安?2 不同的文化并不仅仅是给世界贴上不同标签的人群;语言给了我们塑造世界观的工具,而语言又是不一样的。

3 当千百万人在学习文化沟通的时候,英语国家却越来越沾沾自喜,以为懂得英语就足够了,因而削减了外语课程。

4 最能推动这一进程的不一定是那些掌握了最新技术,拥有最先进手机的人,而是那些能够理解众多不同语言的言内之意,言下之意以及言外之意的人。

II.1.Children may swim here provided that they are accompanied by adults2.This American journalist made a fool of himself over his remarks about China, becausehe’s been out of touch with what’s been happening in the country in the past three decades.3.Every person has the right to education, regardless of his or her family background, sex,and age.4.The invention of the Internet, despite the fact that it has given rise to some problems, hasgreatly facilitated almost every aspect of our life, including education, medicine, and business.5.Never overlook your travel insurance when you are planning to spend you holiday abroad;otherwise you might find yourself in great trouble if any accident should occur.6.In the movie that billionaire was faced with a dilemma---either divorce his wife, whowould then carve out half of his financial empire, or murder her at the risk of being found out by the police.7.As the husband lost his job in the financial crisis, the new couple had to cut down on a lotof things---furniture, clothes, records, books, and so on.8.Over thirty years ago, right after the Cultural Revolution, Deng Xiaoping told the peoplethat the only way out lay in reform and opening up to the outside world.。

UnitCulturalEncounters答案综合教程二

UnitCulturalEncounters答案综合教程二

Unit4Cultural EncountersKey to the ExercisesText comprehensionI.BII.1. T。

2. F。

3. T。

4. T。

5. T.III.1. “snail mail”.2. “an essential stepping stone on the road to success”.3. “the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society”.4. “the means to shape our views of the world”.5. “to negotiate the boundaries between languages and to compromise in translation”.6. “to use linguistic skills, to think differently, to enter into another culture’s mentality and to shape language accordingly”.IV.1. The age we are living provides us with convenient ways to reach any part of the world.2. It seems that everyone is able to always get in touch with anyone else if he or she can afford to.3. is the most important to society.4. This is a fundamental skill in today’s world, where different cultures interact.5. Lots of people are finding ways to interrelate different cultures.Structural analysis of the text1. The last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: “Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.”2. Paragraph 4: The lack of an exa ct counterpart of the English word “homesickness” in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.Paragraph 5: The problem of untranslatability which the early Bible translators encountered.Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range。

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二

Unit 4 Cultural Encounters课文翻译综合教程二嗨,伙计们!今天咱们来聊聊文化碰撞这个话题。

你们知道吗,有时候我们和外国人交流的时候,会因为文化差异而产生一些有趣的误会。

比如说,有一次我在餐厅点了一份炒饭,结果服务员给我上了一碗汤。

我当时就愣住了,心想:“这是怎么回事啊?”后来才知道,原来在他们的文化里,炒饭就是汤的意思。

哈哈,这可真是让人哭笑不得啊!不过,这种文化碰撞也让我们学到了很多东西。

比如说,我们可以从外国人的视角看待问题,发现自己的观念可能有些狭隘。

还有呢,我们可以学会尊重不同的文化,这样才能更好地与人相处。

其实,文化碰撞并不仅仅发生在国际交往中。

在我们日常生活中,也经常会遇到各种各样的文化差异。

比如说,有些人喜欢用筷子吃饭,而有些人则习惯用刀叉。

有些人喜欢喝热水,而有些人则喜欢喝冰水。

这些看似微不足道的小事,其实都反映了不同文化的特色。

我们应该如何应对这些文化差异呢?我们要学会尊重。

每个国家都有自己的历史和传统,我们不能因为别人的做法和我们的不一样就嘲笑他们。

我们要学会沟通。

当我们遇到不明白的事情时,不要猜测别人的意图,而是直接问清楚。

我们要保持开放的心态。

只有这样,我们才能真正地了解和接纳不同的文化。

当然啦,文化碰撞也有它的乐趣所在。

比如说,你可能会发现一些非常有趣的习俗。

比如说,在西班牙,人们在庆祝圣诞节的时候会举行一场盛大的游行,人们会打扮成各种奇怪的角色,如猫女、海盗等。

而在日本,人们会在樱花盛开的季节举行“赏花大会”,大家一起欣赏美丽的樱花。

这些活动不仅让我们感受到了不同文化的魅力,还让我们的生活变得更加丰富多彩。

文化碰撞是我们生活中不可避免的一部分。

我们既要学会应对这些差异,也要学会从中寻找乐趣。

只有这样,我们才能在这个多元化的世界里更好地生存和发展。

今天的分享就到这里啦,希望对你们有所启发。

下次再见啦!。

Unit4 Cultural Encounters

Unit4 Cultural Encounters

Background information (1)
As Brown explains, “It is apparent that culture, as an ingrained set of behaviors and modes of perception, becomes highly important in the learning of a second language. • A language is a part of a culture, and a culture is a part of a language; the two are intricately interwoven so that one cannot separate the two without losing the significance of either language or culture.
• She is author of over 20 books, and her Translation Studies, (3rd ed. 2002) which first appeared in 1980, has remained consistently in print and has become the most important textbook around the world in the expanding field of Translation Studies.
Take Chinese and English idioms a drop in the ocean 沧海一粟 to laugh off one’s head 笑掉大牙 to shed crocodile tears 猫哭老鼠 to spend money like water 挥金如土 turn up one's nose at 嗤之以鼻 rain cats and dogs 倾盆大雨 black and blue 鼻青脸肿 at sixes and sevens 乱七八糟

unit 4 Cultural Encounters

unit 4  Cultural Encounters

Unit 4 Cultural EncountersCultural EncountersSusan Bassnett11 We live in an age of easy access to the rest of the world. Cheap flights mean that millionsof people are able to visit places their parents could only dream about, while the Internetenables us to communicate with the remotest places and the traditional postal services are now referred to almost mockingly as “snail mail2.” When students go off backpacking3, they can email their parents from Internet cafes4 in the Himalayas5 or from a desert oasis. And as for mobile phones — the clicking of text messaging6 at any hour of the day or night hasbecome familiar to us all. Everyone, it seems, provided, of course, they can afford to do so, need never be out of touch.2 Significantly also, this great global communications revolution is also linked to theConferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless ofwhether anyone present is a native English speaker. English has simply become the language that facilitates communication, and for many people learning English is an essential stepping stone on the road to success.73 So why, you may wonder, would anyone have misgivings about all these wonderfuldevelopments, and why does the rise of English as a global language cause feelings ofuneasiness for some of us? For there are indeed problems with the communicationsrevolution, problems that are not only economic. Most fundamental is the profoundQuestions:1. What do cheap flights and the Internet mean to people today? (Paragraph 1)Cheap flights mean that millions of people can afford to visit places their parents could only dream about, while the Internet means that numerous people are able to communicate with the remotest places with great ease.2. Exemplify and explain that English has become the most important international language. (Paragraph 2)Conferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless of whether anyone present is a native English speaker. English has simply become the language that facilitates communication, and for many people learning English is an essential stepping stone on the road to success.Words and Expressions1. access n. entrance; way in; means of entering or the right to use or look at something Derivation:accessible a.2. communicate vi. share or exchange feelings, opinions, or information, etc.Derivation:communication n.communicative a.3. remote a. distant in space or timeDerivation:remoteness n.Comparison: distant, far, remotedistant very far away esp. in distancefar describe something that is not near, or the part of something that is most distant from the centre or from youremote describe an area, house or village that is a long way from any towns or cities4. mockingly ad. in a way in which sb. or sth. is made fun of5. regardless of without taking account of or worrying about6. facilitate vt. help; make easy or easierDerivation:facilitation n.facilitative a.7. stepping stone any of a row of large stones with a level top, which one walks on to cross a riveror stream; figuratively, a way of improvement or gaining success8. have misgivings not be sure9. fundamental a. basicDerivation:fundamentally ad.10. profound a. intense; deep; very strongly feltDerivation:profoundly ad.11. at one’s peril (used when advising sb. not to do sth.) with the near certainty of meeting greatdangerSentences1. We live in an age of easy access to the rest of the world. (Paragraph 1)Translation: 我们生活在一个可以轻松到达世界其它角落的时代。

unit 4 cultural encounters

unit 4 cultural encounters
Para4-7
1.What’s relationship between language and culture?
2.What are the examples?
Homesickness= Angst=
3.What’s the problem translators face?
4.What is compromise?
CS: learn how to___________________________________________. This is an essential skill in today’s hybrid world, more people become _____________________.
5.What are the examples?
6.What’s the future tendency of the spread of English?
7.What’s the problem that native English speakers may face?
8.What’s real communication?
Email parents from _________________________________________.
Mobile phones send text messages _____________________________.
CS: afford to do so, need never be__________________. (age of technology)
DS: homesickness=nostalgia=saudade
Angst=sadness/regret

Unit4CulturalEncountersTeachingplan综合教程二

Unit4CulturalEncountersTeachingplan综合教程二

Unit4CulturalEncountersTeachingplan综合教程⼆Unit 4 Cultural EncountersTeaching PointsBy the end of this unit, students are supposed to1)grasp the idea revealed in the writing and make clear the structure of the wholepassage through an intensive reading of Cultural Encounters.2)comprehend the deductive approach of argumentation development.3)get a list of new words and structures and use them freely in conversation andwriting.4)be aware of the importance and significance of intercultural understanding andempathy.Topics for discussion1)In what language are you usually surfing at Internet websites?2)What fun do you find on Internet?3)Have you ever encounter any intercultural misunderstanding? If have, can you listthe reasons that account for the misunderstandings?Cultural information1. QuotesHuman beings draw close to one another by their common nature, but habits and customs keep them apart.— Confucius2. Cross-cultural Communication StrategiesThe key to effective cross-cultural communication is knowledge.First, it is essential that people understand the potential problems of cross-cultural communication, and make a conscious effort to overcome these problems.Second, it is important to assume that one’s efforts will not always be successful, and adjus t one’s behavior appropriately. Suggestions for heated conflicts is to stop,listen, and think. This helps in cross-cultural communication as well.When things seem to be going badly, stop or slow down and think.Active listening can sometimes be used to check this out — by repeating what one thinks he or she heard, one can confirm that one understands the communication accurately.Often intermediaries who are familiar with both cultures can be helpful in cross-cultural communication situations. They can translate both the substance and the manner of what is said. They may explain the problem, and make appropriate procedural adjustments.Text ICultural EncountersSusan BassnettGlobal ReadingI. Text analysis1.Which sentence is the thesis statement?The last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: ―Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.‖/doc/b215940668.htmlpromising, in the author’s view, is a key notion in translation and thus also inintercultural communication. Numerous examples are used to explain this notion.Try to find these examples.Paragraph 4: The lack of an exact counterpart of the English word ―homesickness‖ in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.Paragraph 5: The problem of untranslatability which the early Bible translators encountered.Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range; the flat breads of Central Asia area long way away from Mother’s Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word ―bread‖ hasto serve for both.II. Structural analysis1.What type of writing is this essay? And what’s the main strategy the author adopt todevelop the body of the essay?It is a piece of argumentation. Abundant examples are provided to support her argument in the body of the essay.Detailed ReadingParagraphs 1-3Questions:1. What do cheap flights and the Internet mean to people today? (Paragraph 1)Cheap flights mean that millions of people can afford to visit places their parents could only dream about, while the Internet means that numerous people are able to communicate with the remotest places with great ease.2. Exemplify and explain that English has become the most important international language. (Paragraph 2)Conferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless of whether anyone present is a native English speaker. English has simply become the language that facilitates communication, and for many people learning English is an essential stepping stone on the road to success.Paragraphs 4-7Questions:1. Supply specific examples to prove that language and culture are closely related to each other.(Paragraph 4)Numerous examples show that language and culture are interrelated. Take a look at some English idioms and see how different their Chinese counterparts are:a drop in the ocean 沧海⼀粟to laugh one’s head off 笑掉⼤⽛to shed crocodile tears 猫哭⽼⿏to spend money like water 挥⾦如⼟to be born with a silver spoon in one’s mouth ⽣长在富贵⼈家2. Explain and illustrate what ―compromising‖and ―the spread of English‖mean. (Paragraph 7)For ―compromising,‖ refer to Paragraph 6 of the text. A s to ―the spread of English,‖ a typical example is the spread of English in China. Compared with other nations, China boasts the largest number of people who have learned or are learning English. Chinese learners of English are learning how to overcome cultural and linguistic differences. In today’s China, the mastery of English has become an important skill which is of great use and value in all walks of life.Paragraph 8Questions:1. According to the writer, what is the great function of intercultural understanding? (Paragraph 8)The writer says, ―World peace in the future depends on intercultural understanding.‖In other words, intercultural understanding will play a most important role in the promotion of world peace in the future.2. Who will probably be most able to help the process of world peace in the future? (Paragraph 8)Those who are most competent to contribute to the process of world peace probably are those who have acquired the skills to understand the literal, implied, figurative, or cultural meanings of the words spoken in many different languages.Text IIDoes Your Body Betray You?Lead-in Questions1.What is body language? What kinds of body language can you think of?2.Can you tell the meanings of some common facial expressions or gestures?Main ideasDoes Your Body Betray you,the title indicates that changes in your body position and movements show what you are feeling or thinking. In fact, three-quarters of the social meaning of a typical two-person exchange is carried by nonverbal cues, though most of the time we are not aware that we are doing it. Nonverbal signals differ from culture to culture at least as much as one language differs from another, and so we need to realize that knowledge of a foreign language is incomplete unless it extends to the nonverbal signals. So, it is essential to get some knowledge about nonverbal communication. The passage provides us with some commonly-used body language cues and their interpretations through a list of examples.Notes1. body language(Paragraph 1): Body language is communication by means of facial expressions, gestures, postures, and other wordless signals. Body language also includes grooming habits, hair and clothing styles, and such practices as tattooing and body piercing. Body language communicates unspoken information about people’s identity, relationships, and thoughts, as well as moods, motivation, and attitudes. It plays an essential role in all interpersonal relationships, such as childcare, politics, teaching, and public speaking. The scientific study of body language is called kinesics.2. be telling the world a totally different story (Paragraph 1): be meaning entirely different things from what you are saying3. ... however cool and contained you think you’re being, there is a host of little telltale gestures and expressions that give you away ... (Paragraph 2): …however successfully you think you are managing to appear calm and self-controlled, a large number of slight changes in your body position and movements provide evidence about what you are feeling or thinking ...4. ... you’re a bundle of nerves. (Paragraph 4): ... you are feeling very nervous.5. invading your space (Paragraph 5): intruding into your air spaceStudies by experts suggest that man walks around inside a kind of private bubble, which represents the amount of air space he feels he must have between himself and other people. To invade is to affect someone in an unwanted and annoying way.e.g.Does that give you an excuse to invade my privacy?6. keep them at arm’s length(Paragraph 5): avoid developing a relationship with theme.g.If you’re wise, you’ll keep Mrs. Jones at arm’s length. She’s the worst gossip inthe village.7. You want to block out the speaker’s words … (Paragraph 7): You want to stop yourself thinking about what the speaker says …8. in your heart of hearts(Paragraph 8): If you know, feel, or believe something in your heart ofhearts, you are sure about it although you may not admit it.e.g.Claire knew in her heart of hearts that she would never go back there.9. trying to shield her listener from what she’s saying(Paragraph 9): trying to protect herlistener from being hurt by what she’s sayinge.g.Several officials are accused of trying to shield the General from US federalinvestigators.10. rather than (Paragraph 11): instead ofe.g.Rather than squeezing your own oranges, have you tried buying packs of orange juice?11. in a quandary (Paragraph 12): unable to decide what to do about a difficult problemor situatione.g.The city council is in a quandary over whether to raise taxes or not.Questions for discussion1. What does the title of the text mean?2. What does the author mean when he says ―three-quarters of our knowledge about them comes via our eyes rather than our ears‖?3. How can one’s gestures and expressions give him / her away?4. What conclusion can we draw from such instinctive behaviour as fiddling and arm folding?5. What is the main idea of LOVE SIGNS?6. Why doesn’t the author spell out a precise vocabulary of gestures?7. What implications does the study of body language have for learning a foreign language?8. Observe people near you for several days, looking for uses of body language. Try also to be conscious of your own use of body language. What conclusion can you draw?Key to questions for discussion1. Changes in your body position and movements show what you are feeling or thinking.2. Three-quarters of the social meaning of a typical two-person exchange is carried bynonverbal cues.3. All of us communicate with one another nonverbally, as well as with words. Most of the time we are not aware that we are doing it. Body language provides evidence about how the human mind processes information.4. People feel safer behind some kind of physical barrier. If a social situation is in any way threatening, then there is an immediate urge to set up such a barricade.5. When two people look searchingly into each other’s eyes, emotions are heightened andthe relationship becomes more intimate. Therefore, we carefully avoid this, except in appropriate circumstances.6. The author looks for patterns in the context, not for an isolated meaningful gesture.Besides, there are several possible interpretations for a single gesture. For example,when a student in conversation with a professor holds the older man’s eyes a little longer than is usual, it can be a sign of respect and affection rather than a sign of love.7. Nonverbal signals differ from culture to culture at least as much as one language differs from another, and so we need to realize that knowledge of a foreign language is incomplete unless it extends to the nonverbal signals.Memorable QuotesRead the following quotes and analyze the purposes of culture advanced by Matthew Arnold.Guidance: The following quotes are from Culture and Anarchy— a series of periodical essays by Matthew Arnold. In the book, he advanced that ―Culture ... is a study of perfection‖. He further wrote that: ―It (Culture) seeks to do away with classes; to make the best that has been thought and known in the world current everywhere; to make all men live in an atmosphere of sweetness and light ...‖1. Culture has one great passion — the passion for sweetness and light. It has one even yet greater, the passion for making them prevail.— Matthew Arnold Matthew Arnold (1822–1888) was an English poet.Paraphrase:Part of the essence of culture is the love of beauty and unbiased intelligence. The even more essential part of culture is to make the best ideas — the love of beauty and unbiased intelligence, to be the most common.2. The men of culture are the true apostles of equality.— Matthew Arnold Paraphrase: The men of culture diffuse the best ideas regardless of class.。

2-Unit4-Cultural Encounters答案综合教程二讲解学习

2-Unit4-Cultural Encounters答案综合教程二讲解学习

2-U n i t4-C u l t u r a l E n c o u n t e r s答案综合教程二Unit 4 Cultural EncountersKey to the ExercisesText comprehensionI.BII.1. T;2. F;3. T;4. T;5. T.III.1. “snail mail”.2. “an essential stepping stone on the road to success”.3. “the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society”.4. “the means to shape our views of the world”.5. “to negotiate the boundaries between languages and to compromise in translation”.6. “to use linguistic skills, to think differently, to enter into another culture’s mentality and to shape language accordingly”.IV.1. The age we are living provides us with convenient ways to reach any part of the world.2. It seems that everyone is able to always get in touch with anyone else if he or she can afford to.3. is the most important to society.4. This is a fundamental skill in today’s world, where different cultures interact.5. Lots of people are finding ways to interrelate different cultures.Structural analysis of the text1. The last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: “Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.”2. Paragraph 4: The lack of an exact counterpart of the English word “homesickness” in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.Paragraph 5: The problem of untranslatability which the early Bible translators encountered.Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range; The word “democracy” means completely different things in different contexts; the flat breads of Central Asia are a long way away from Mot her’s Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word “bread” has to serve for both.VocabularyI. Phrase practice1. provided =as long as 假如,倘若need never be out of touch =can never fail to be reached 从不会失去联系2. regardless of =no matter 不管,不顾3. overlook at our peril =fail to notice at great risk 忽视……的危险或风险4. hovers somewhere in and around all those words =may be described by these words to varying degrees5. hit the problem of untranslatability head-on = were directly confronted with the problem that something in one language cannot be rendered into anotherII.1. stepping stone;2. at their peril;3. serve;4. mentality;5. staple;6. facilitating;7. messaging;8. hybrid.III. Word derivationFill in the blanks with the appropriate forms of the given words.1. economy2. accessible3. fundamentally4. homesick5. negotiable6. adjusted7. remoteness8. complacentlyIV.1. D;2. C;3. A;4. D;5. B;6. A;7. B;8. C.V. Synonym / AntonymGive a synonym or an antonym of the word underlined in each sentence in the sense it is used.1. Synonym: time, era, epoch2. Synonym: meetings3. Synonym: basic, fundamental4. Antonym: misshape5. Synonym: unavoidably6. Synonym: worry, concern, anxiety7. Antonym: hide, concealVI. PrefixWrite in each space one word that has the same prefix as underlined in the given word. 1. unbelievable 2. imperfect3. disagreement4. misplace5. malfunction6. enable7. surpass 8. submarineGrammarI. Complete the following sentences with the correct verb forms.1. helps2. hope; are enjoying; sunbathe; go; are going.3. is being.4. is typing5. am not eating.6. am reading7. are always leaving.8. go; belongs; wants; is using.9. is boiling.10. is putting; is rewiring; is building.II. Correct the errors.1. is passing → passes; is shooting → shoots.2. OK.3. are crying.4. OK.5. am knowing → know.6. am gathering → gather.7. work → am working.8. do → are; sneeze → sneezing.III.thank; are dispatching; regret; have; are contacting; hear; enclose/are enclosing; decide; have; are listed; regret; hope; enclose/are enclosing.IV.1. a. The speaker is complaining; b. The speaker gives a fact.2. a. am considering; b. have the opinion.3. a. It suggests a permanent nature; b. It suggests a temporary behaviour.4. a. is taking care of; b. have no objection to.5. a. am waiting for; b. believe.6. a. am waiting for; b. believe.V. Position of adjectivesRewrite the following descriptions putting the adjectives in the correct order.1. a large pair of red woolen socks2. a powerful new white German car3. a small rectangular grey Japanese radio4. a big modern concrete office building5. a medium size French stainless steel saucepan6. a superb medieval rose-shaped stained-glass window7. a prominent triangular red road sign8. a tiny black and white Chinese dogTranslationI.1.因此,你也许会问,为什么还有人会对这些绝妙的发展顾虑重重?为什么英语成为世界语言会让一部分人惴惴不安?2.不同的文化并不仅仅是给世界贴上不同标签的人群;语言给了我们塑造世界观的工具,而语言又是不一样的。

Unit4-cultural-encounters(1)

Unit4-cultural-encounters(1)

Text analysis Structural analysis
Paragraphs 4-7

Main idea
It exemplifies that language and culture are so closely interrelated that often we find that what we can say in one language cannot be conveyed at all in another, and that confronted with insurmountable linguistic problems, translators negotiate the boundaries between languages and come up with a compromise.
Text analysis Structural analysis
Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range; the flat breads of Central Asia are a long way away from Mother’s Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word “bread” has to serve for both.
Paragraph 4: The lack of an exact counterpart of the English word “homesickness” in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.

unit-4-cultural-encounters

unit-4-cultural-encounters
and make us what we are. • …塑造我们的生活铸就我们的个性。 • 他对生活的态度部分是受早年经历的影响 • …were shaped partly by early experience.
involve
• engage as a participant • collocation: involve sb. in sth/doing • Eg: Elsa and I do everything together, she
The last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: “Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.”
Remote
distance in time and space
Eg: 我们可以通过望远镜看到遥远的星星。 not relevant to Eg: Your comments are rather remote from
the subjects we are discussing.
I use sunscreen whenever there is even a remote possibility that I will be in the sun.
2.Exemplify and explain that English has become the most important international language.
Conferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless of whether anyone present is a native English speaker.

unit4culturalencountersteachingplan综合教程二

unit4culturalencountersteachingplan综合教程二

Unit 4 Cultural EncountersTeaching PointsBy the end of this unit, students are supposed to1)grasp the idea revealed in the writing and make clear the structure of the wholepassage through an intensive reading of Cultural Encounters.2)comprehend the deductive approach of argumentation development.3)get a list of new words and structures and use them freely in conversation andwriting.4)be aware of the importance and significance of intercultural understanding andempathy.Topics for discussion1)In what language are you usually surfing at Internet websites?2)What fun do you find on Internet?3)Have you ever encounter any intercultural misunderstanding? If have, can youlist the reasons that account for the misunderstandings?Cultural information1. QuotesHuman beings draw close to one another by their common nature, but habits and customs keep them apart.— Confucius2. Cross-cultural Communication StrategiesThe key to effective cross-cultural communication is knowledge.◊First, it is essential that people understand the potential problems of cross-cultural communication, and make a conscious effort to overcome these problems.◊Second, it is important to assume that one’s efforts will not always be successful, and adjust one’s behavior appropriately.Suggestions for heated conflicts is to stop, listen, and think. This helps in cross-cultural communication as well.◊ When things seem to be going badly, stop or slow down and think.◊Active listening can sometimes be used to check this out —by repeating what one thinks he or she heard, one can confirm that one understands the communication accurately.◊ Often intermediaries who are familiar with both cultures can be helpful in cross-cultural communication situations. They can translate both the substance and the manner of what is said. They may explain the problem, and make appropriate procedural adjustments.Text ICultural EncountersSusan BassnettGlobal ReadingI. Text analysis1.Which sentence is the thesis statement?The last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: “Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.”promising, in the author’s view, is a key notion in translation and thusalso in intercultural communication. Numerous examples are used to explain this notion. Try to find these examples.Paragraph 4: The lack of an exact counterpart of the English word “homesickness” in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.Paragraph 5: The problem of untranslatability which the early Bible translators encountered.Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range; the flat breads of Central Asia are a long way away fr om Mother’s Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word “bread” has to serve for both.II. Structural analysis1.What type of writing is this essay? And what’s the main strategy the authoradopt to develop the body of the essay?It is a piece of argumentation. Abundant examples are provided to support her argument in the body of the essay.2.Divide the text into parts by completing the table.Detailed ReadingParagraphs 1-3Questions:1. What do cheap flights and the Internet mean to people today? (Paragraph 1) Cheap flights mean that millions of people can afford to visit places their parents could only dream about, while the Internet means that numerous people are able to communicate with the remotest places with great ease.2. Exemplify and explain that English has become the most important international language. (Paragraph 2)Conferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless of whether anyone present is a native English speaker. English has simply become the language that facilitates communication, and for many people learning English is an essential stepping stone on the road to success.Paragraphs 4-7Questions:1. Supply specific examples to prove that language and culture are closely related to each other.(Paragraph 4)Numerous examples show that language and culture are interrelated. Take a look at some English idioms and see how different their Chinese counterparts are:a drop in the ocean 沧海一粟to laugh one’s head off 笑掉大牙to shed crocodile tears 猫哭老鼠to spend money like water 挥金如土to be born with a silver spoon in one’s mouth 生长在富贵人家2. Explain and illustrate what “compromising”and “the spread of English”mean. (Paragraph 7)For “compromising,” refer to Paragraph 6 of the text. A s to “the spread of English,” a typical example is the spread of English in China. Compared with other nations, China boasts the largest number of people who have learned or are learning English. Chinese learners of English are learning how to overcome cultural and linguistic differences. In today’s China, the mastery of English has become an important skill which is of great use and value in all walks of life.Paragraph 8Questions:1. According to the writer, what is the great function of intercultural understanding? (Paragraph 8)The writer says, “World peace in the future depends on intercultural understanding.” In other words, intercultural understanding will play a most important role in the promotion of world peace in the future.2. Who will probably be most able to help the process of world peace in the future? (Paragraph 8)Those who are most competent to contribute to the process of world peace probably are those who have acquired the skills to understand the literal, implied, figurative, or cultural meanings of the words spoken in many different languages.Text IIDoes Your Body Betray You?Lead-in Questions1.What is body language? What kinds of body language can you think of?2.Can you tell the meanings of some common facial expressions or gestures?Main ideasDoes Your Body Betray you,the title indicates that changes in your body position and movements show what you are feeling or thinking. In fact, three-quarters of the social meaning of a typical two-person exchange is carried by nonverbal cues, though most of the time we are not aware that we are doing it. Nonverbal signals differ from culture to culture at least as much as one language differs from another, and so we need to realize that knowledge of a foreign language is incomplete unless it extends to the nonverbal signals. So, it is essential to get some knowledge about nonverbal communication. The passage provides us with some commonly-used body language cues and their interpretations through a list of examples.Notes1. body language (Paragraph 1): Body language is communication by means of facial expressions, gestures, postures, and other wordless signals. Body language also includes grooming habits, hair and clothing styles, and such practices as tattooing and body piercing. Body language communicates unspoken information about people’s identity, relationships, and thoughts, as well as moods, motivation, and attitudes. It plays an essential role in all interpersonal relationships, such as childcare, politics, teaching, and public speaking. The scientific study of body language is called kinesics.2. be telling the world a totally different story(Paragraph 1): be meaning entirely different things from what you are saying3. ... however cool and contained you think you’re being, there is a host of little telltale gestures and expressions that give you away ... (Paragraph 2): …however successfully you think you are managing to appear calm and self-controlled, a large number of slight changes in your body position and movements provide evidence about what you are feeling or thinking ...4. ... you’re a bundle of nerves. (Paragraph 4): ... you are feeling very nervous.5. invading your space (Paragraph 5): intruding into your air spaceStudies by experts suggest that man walks around inside a kind of private bubble, which represents the amount of air space he feels he must have between himself and other people. To invade is to affect someone in an unwanted and annoying way. .Does that give you an excuse to invade my privacy?6. keep them at arm’s length (Paragraph 5): avoid developing a relationship with them. If you’re wise, you’ll keep Mrs. Jones at arm’s length. She’s the worst gossip in the village.7. You want to block out the speaker’s words … (Paragraph 7): You want to stop yourself thinking about what the speaker says …8. in your heart of hearts (Paragraph 8): If you know, feel, or believe something in your heart ofhearts, you are sure about it although you may not admit it.. Claire knew in her heart of hearts that she would never go back there.9. trying to shield her listener from what she’s saying (Paragraph 9): trying to protect herlistener from being hurt by what she’s saying. Several officials are accused of trying to shield the General from US federal investigators.10. rather than (Paragraph 11): instead of. Rather than squeezing your own oranges, have you tried buying packs of orange juice?11. in a quandary (Paragraph 12): unable to decide what to do about a difficultproblem or situation.The city council is in a quandary over whether to raise taxes or not.Questions for discussion1. What does the title of the text mean?2. What does the author mean when he says “three-quarters of our knowledge about them comes via our eyes rather than our ears”?3. How can one’s gestures and expressions give him / her away?4. What conclusion can we draw from such instinctive behaviour as fiddling and arm folding?5. What is the main idea of LOVE SIGNS?6. Why doesn’t the author spell out a precise vocabulary of gestures?7. What implications does the study of body language have for learning a foreign language?8. Observe people near you for several days, looking for uses of body language. Try also to be conscious of your own use of body language. What conclusion can you draw?Key to questions for discussion1. Changes in your body position and movements show what you are feeling or thinking.2. Three-quarters of the social meaning of a typical two-person exchange is carriedby nonverbal cues.3. All of us communicate with one another nonverbally, as well as with words. Most of the time we are not aware that we are doing it. Body language provides evidence about how the human mind processes information.4. People feel safer behind some kind of physical barrier. If a social situation is in any way threatening, then there is an immediate urge to set up such a barricade.5. When two people look searchingly into each other’s eyes, emotions are heightenedand the relationship becomes more intimate. Therefore, we carefully avoid this, except in appropriate circumstances.6. The author looks for patterns in the context, not for an isolated meaningfulgesture. Besides, there are several possible interpretations for a single gesture.For example, when a student in conversation with a professor holds the older man’s eyes a little longer than is usual, it can be a sign of respect and affection rather than a sign of love.7. Nonverbal signals differ from culture to culture at least as much as one language differs from another, and so we need to realize that knowledge of a foreign language is incomplete unless it extends to the nonverbal signals.Memorable QuotesRead the following quotes and analyze the purposes of culture advanced by Matthew Arnold.Guidance:The following quotes are from Culture and Anarchy—a series of periodical essays by Matthew Arnold. In the book, he advanced that “Culture ... is a study of perfection”. He further wrote that: “It (Culture) seeks to do away with classes; to make the best that has been thought and known in the world current everywhere; to make all men live in an atmosphere of sweetness and light ...”1. Culture has one great passion —the passion for sweetness and light. It has one even yet greater, the passion for making them prevail.— Matthew Arnold Matthew Arnold (1822–1888) was an English poet.Paraphrase: Part of the essence of culture is the love of beauty and unbiased intelligence. The even more essential part of culture is to make the best ideas —the love of beauty and unbiased intelligence, to be the most common.2. The men of culture are the true apostles of equality.— Matthew Arnold Paraphrase: The men of culture diffuse the best ideas regardless of class.。

unit4culturalencounters课文翻译综合教程二

unit4culturalencounters课文翻译综合教程二

U n i t4C u l t u r a l E n c o u n t e r s课文翻译综合教程二-CAL-FENGHAI.-(YICAI)-Company One1Unit 4 Cultural EncountersSusan BassnettWe live in an age of easy access to the rest of the world. Cheap flights mean that millions of people are able to visit places their parents could only dream about, while the Internet enables us to communicate with the remotest places and the traditional postal services are now referred to almost mockingly as "snail mail." When students go off back-packing, they can email their parents from Internet cafes in the Himalayas or from a desert oasis. And as for mobile phones — the clicking of text messaging at any hour of the day or night has become familiar to us all. Everyone, it seems, provided, of course, they can afford to do so, need never be out of touch.Significantly also, this great global communications revolution is also linked to the expansion of English, which has now become the leading international language. Conferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless of whether anyone present is a native English speaker. English has simply become the language that facilitates communication, and for many people learning English is an essential stepping stone on the road to success.So why, you may wonder, would anyone have misgivings about all these wonderful developments, and why does the rise of English as a global language cause feelings of uneasiness for some of us For there are indeed problems with the communications revolution, problems that are not only economic. Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.Different cultures are not simply groups of people who label the world differently; languages give us the means to shape our views of the world and languages are different from one another. We express what we see and feel through language, and because languages are so clearly culture-related, often we find that what we can say in one language cannot be expressed at all in another. The English word "homesickness" translates into Italian as "nostalgia," but English has had to borrow that same word to describe a different state of mind, something that is not quite homesickness and involves a kind of longing. Homesickness and nostalgia put together are almost, but not quite, the Portuguese "saudade," an untranslatable word that describes a state of mind that is not despair, angst (English borrowed that from German), sadness or regret, but hovers somewhere in and around all those words.The early Bible translators hit the problem of untranslatability head-on. How do you translate the image of the Lamb of God for a culture in which sheep do not exist What exactly was the fruit that Eve picked in the Garden of Eden What was the creature that swallowed Jonah, given that whales are not given to swimming in warm, southern seas Faced with unsurmountable linguistic problems, translators negotiated the boundaries between languages and came up with a compromise.Compromising is something that speakers of more than one language understand. When there are no words in another language for what you want to say, you make adjustments and try to approximate. English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the colour spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range, since English has four words and Welsh has three. And even where words do exist, compromises still need to be made. The word "democracy" means completely different things in different contexts, and even a word like "bread" which refers to a staple food item made of flour means totally different things to different people. The flat breads of Central Asia are a long way away from Mother's Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word "bread" has to serve for both.Inevitably, the spread of English means that millions of people are adding another language to their own and are learning how to negotiate cultural and linguistic differences. This is an essential skill in today's hybrid world, particularly now when the need for international understanding has rarely been so important. But even as more people become multilingual, so native English speakers are losing out, for they are becoming ever more monolingual, and hence increasingly unaware of the differences between cultures that languages reveal. Communicating in another language involves not only linguistic skills, but the ability to think differently, to enter into another culture's mentality and shape language accordingly. Millions of people are discovering how to bridge cultures, while the English-speaking world becomes ever more complacent and cuts down on foreign language learning programmes in the mistaken belief that it is enough to know English.World peace in the future depends on intercultural understanding. Those best placed to help that process may not be the ones with the latest technology and state of the art mobile phones, but those with the skills to understand what lies in, under and beyond the words spoken in many different languages.文化冲突我们生活在一个交流非常便捷的时代。

Unit4 Cultural Encounters

Unit4   Cultural Encounters

Main idea
1~3: main talking about the communications revolution taking place worldwide and the widespread use of the English language.
Unit4Cultura源自 Encounters组长:赵建飞 组员:施东月 高俊梅 胡桂芳
Key words
1.access 接近
Access to….通向…的入口 Eg:access to market 市场准入 2.rise 上升 Rise up 起义 rise and shine 快起床
Phrasesh:
1.refer to…as… 把..视为… 2.be link to…. 与…..相连….. 3.at one’s peril 自担风险 4.go off backpacking=far away to hiking 远途旅行 5.regardless of =in spite of=in despite of 不管 不顾
的入口market市场准入2rise上升riseup起义riseshine快起床3profound深厚的nprofoundity4facilitate促进adjfacilitative容易5essential基本的必不可少的advessentially基本地6mockingly嘲笑mock嘲弄phrasesh
3.profound 深厚的 n.profoundity 深 度 深奥 4.facilitate 促进 adj.facilitative 容易 的 便利的 5.essential 基本的 必不可少的 adv.essentially 基本地 6.mockingly 嘲笑 mock at 嘲弄
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Unit 4 Cultural EncountersTeaching PointsBy the end of this unit, students are supposed to1)grasp the idea revealed in the writing and make clear the structure of the wholepassage through an intensive reading of Cultural Encounters.2)comprehend the deductive approach of argumentation development.3)get a list of new words and structures and use them freely in conversation andwriting.4)be aware of the importance and significance of intercultural understanding andempathy.Topics for discussion1)In what language are you usually surfing at Internet websites2)What fun do you find on Internet3)Have you ever encounter any intercultural misunderstanding If have, can you listthe reasons that account for the misunderstandingsCultural information1. QuotesHuman beings draw close to one another by their common nature, but habits and customs keep them apart.— Confucius2. Cross-cultural Communication StrategiesThe key to effective cross-cultural communication is knowledge.◊ First, it is essential that people understand the potential problems of cross-cultural communication, and make a conscious effort to overcome these problems.◊Second, it is important to assume that one’s efforts will not always be successful, and adjust one’s behavior appropriately.Suggestions for heated conflicts is to stop, listen, and think. This helps in cross-cultural communication as well.◊ When things seem to be going badly, stop or slow down and think.◊Active listening can sometimes be used to check this out —by repeating what one thinks he or she heard, one can confirm that one understands the communication accurately.◊ Often intermediaries who are familiar with both cultures can be helpful in cross-cultural communication situations. They can translate both the substance and the manner of what is said. They may explain the problem, and make appropriate procedural adjustments.Text ICultural EncountersSusan BassnettGlobal ReadingI. Text analysis1.Which sentence is the thesis statementThe last sentence of the 3rd paragraph: “Most fundamental is the profound relationship between language and culture that lies at the heart of society and one that we overlook at our peril.”promising, in the author’s view, is a key notion in translation and thusalso in intercultural communication. Numerous examples are used to explain this notion. Try to find these examples.Paragraph 4: The lack of an exact counterpart of the English word “homesickness” in other languages such as Italian, Portuguese, and German.Paragraph 5: The problem of untranslatability which the early Bible translators encountered.Paragraph 6: English and Welsh speakers make adjustments regarding the color spectrum in the grey / green / blue / brown range; the flat breads of Central Asia are a long way away from Mo ther’s Pride white sliced toasties, yet the word “bread” has to serve for both.II. Structural analysis1.What type of writing is this essay And what’s the main strategy the author adoptto develop the body of the essayIt is a piece of argumentation. Abundant examples are provided to support her argument in the body of the essay.2.Divide the text into parts by completing the table.Detailed ReadingParagraphs 1-3Questions:1. What do cheap flights and the Internet mean to people today (Paragraph 1) Cheap flights mean that millions of people can afford to visit places their parents could only dream about, while the Internet means that numerous people are able to communicate with the remotest places with great ease.2. Exemplify and explain that English has become the most important international language. (Paragraph 2)Conferences and business meetings around the globe are held in English, regardless of whether anyone present is a native English speaker. English has simply become the language that facilitates communication, and for many people learning English is an essential stepping stone on the road to success.Paragraphs 4-7Questions:1. Supply specific examples to prove that language and culture are closely related to each other.(Paragraph 4)Numerous examples show that language and culture are interrelated. Take a look at some English idioms and see how different their Chinese counterparts are:a drop in the ocean 沧海一粟to laugh one’s head off 笑掉大牙to shed crocodile tears 猫哭老鼠to spend money like water 挥金如土to be born with a silver spoon in one’s mouth 生长在富贵人家2. Explain and illustrate what “compromising”and “the spread of English”mean. (Paragraph 7)For “compromising,” refer to Paragraph 6 of the text. A s to “the spread of English,” a typical example is the spread of English in China. Compared with other nations, China boasts the largest number of people who have learned or are learning English. Chinese learners of English are learning how to overcome cultural and linguistic differences. In today’s China, the mastery of English has become an important skill which is of great use and value in all walks of life.Paragraph 8Questions:1. According to the writer, what is the great function of intercultural understanding (Paragraph 8)The writer says, “World peace in the future depends on intercultural understanding.” In other words, intercultural understanding will play a most important role in the promotion of world peace in the future.2. Who will probably be most able to help the process of world peace in the future (Paragraph 8)Those who are most competent to contribute to the process of world peace probably are those who have acquired the skills to understand the literal, implied, figurative, or cultural meanings of the words spoken in many different languages. Text IIDoes Your Body Betray YouLead-in Questions1.What is body language What kinds of body language can you think of2.Can you tell the meanings of some common facial expressions or gesturesMain ideasDoes Your Body Betray you,the title indicates that changes in your body position and movements show what you are feeling or thinking. In fact, three-quarters of the social meaning of a typical two-person exchange is carried by nonverbal cues, though most of the time we are not aware that we are doing it. Nonverbal signals differ from culture to culture at least as much as one language differs from another, and so we need to realize that knowledge of a foreign language is incomplete unless it extends to the nonverbal signals. So, it is essential to get some knowledge about nonverbal communication. The passage provides us with some commonly-used body language cues and their interpretations through a list of examples.Notes1. body language (Paragraph 1): Body language is communication by means of facial expressions, gestures, postures, and other wordless signals. Body language also includes grooming habits, hair and clothing styles, and such practices as tattooing and body piercing. Body language communicates unspoken information about people’s identity, relationships, and thoughts, as well as moods, motivation, and attitudes. It plays an essential role in all interpersonal relationships, such as childcare, politics, teaching, and public speaking. The scientific study of body language is called kinesics.2. be telling the world a totally different story(Paragraph 1): be meaning entirely different things from what you are saying3. ... however cool and contained you think you’re being, there is a host of little telltale gestures and expressions that give you away ... (Paragraph 2): …however successfully you think you are managing to appear calm and self-controlled, a large number of slight changes in your body position and movements provide evidence about what you are feeling or thinking ...4. ... you’re a bundle of nerves. (Paragraph 4): ... you are feeling very nervous.5. invading your space (Paragraph 5): intruding into your air spaceStudies by experts suggest that man walks around inside a kind of private bubble, which represents the amount of air space he feels he must have between himself and other people. To invade is to affect someone in an unwanted and annoying way. .Does that give you an excuse to invade my privacy6. keep them at arm’s length (Paragraph 5): avoid developing a relationship with them. If you’re wise, you’ll keep Mrs. Jones at arm’s length. She’s the worst gossip in the village.7. You want to block out the speaker’s words … (Paragraph 7): You want to stop yourself thinking about what the speaker says …8. in your heart of hearts (Paragraph 8): If you know, feel, or believe something in your heart ofhearts, you are sure about it although you may not admit it.. Claire knew in her heart of hearts that she would never go back there.9. trying to shield her listener from what she’s saying (Paragraph 9): trying to protect herlistener from being hurt by what she’s saying. Several officials are accused of trying to shield the General from US federal investigators.10. rather than (Paragraph 11): instead of. Rather than squeezing your own oranges, have you tried buying packs of orange juice11. in a quandary (Paragraph 12): unable to decide what to do about a difficultproblem or situation.The city council is in a quandary over whether to raise taxes or not.Questions for discussion1. What does the title of the text mean2. What does the author mean when he says “three-quarters of our knowledge about them comes via our eyes rather than our ears”3. How can one’s gestures and expressions give him / her away4. What conclusion can we draw from such instinctive behaviour as fiddling and arm folding5. What is the main idea of LOVE SIGNS6. Why doesn’t the author spell out a precise vocabulary of gestures7. What implications does the study of body language have for learning a foreign language8. Observe people near you for several days, looking for uses of body language. Try also to be conscious of your own use of body language. What conclusion can you drawKey to questions for discussion1. Changes in your body position and movements show what you are feeling or thinking.2. Three-quarters of the social meaning of a typical two-person exchange is carriedby nonverbal cues.3. All of us communicate with one another nonverbally, as well as with words. Most of the time we are not aware that we are doing it. Body language provides evidence about how the human mind processes information.4. People feel safer behind some kind of physical barrier. If a social situation is in any way threatening, then there is an immediate urge to set up such a barricade.5. When two people look searchingly into each other’s eyes, emotions are heightenedand the relationship becomes more intimate. Therefore, we carefully avoid this,except in appropriate circumstances.6. The author looks for patterns in the context, not for an isolated meaningfulgesture. Besides, there are several possible interpretations for a single gesture.For example, when a student in conversation with a professor holds the older man’s eyes a little longer than is usual, it can be a sign of respect and affection rather than a sign of love.7. Nonverbal signals differ from culture to culture at least as much as one language differs from another, and so we need to realize that knowledge of a foreign language is incomplete unless it extends to the nonverbal signals.Memorable QuotesRead the following quotes and analyze the purposes of culture advanced by Matthew Arnold.Guidance:The following quotes are from Culture and Anarchy—a series of periodical essays by Matthew Arnold. In the book, he advanced that “Culture ... is a study of perfection”. He further wrote that: “It (Culture) seeks to do away with classes; to make the best that has been thought and known in the world current everywhere; to make all men live in an atmosphere of sweetness and light ...”1. Culture has one great passion —the passion for sweetness and light. It has one even yet greater, the passion for making them prevail.— Matthew Arnold Matthew Arnold (1822–1888) was an English poet.Paraphrase: Part of the essence of culture is the love of beauty and unbiased intelligence. The even more essential part of culture is to make the best ideas —the love of beauty and unbiased intelligence, to be the most common.2. The men of culture are the true apostles of equality.— Matthew Arnold Paraphrase: The men of culture diffuse the best ideas regardless of class.。

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