Title: DOSSIER TEXT 4
1DOSSIER (TEXT 4)
- From Daniel Franklin,
- the Editor of
- The World in 2009
- A special issue of
- The Economist
2TEXT 4 Some initial questions
- What predictions do you agree/disagree with?
- What predictions have surprised you most?
- What issues have not been paid enough attention
to? - How would you describe the prevailing tone of the
article ( e.g. pessimistic, optimistic, neutral,
light, humorous) ?
3TEXT 4 The World in 2009 Structure
- Genre a one-page editorial, which introduces a
special issue of The Economist with predictions
for 2009 - Format A highlighted statement. The photo of the
editor - Text made of 8 paragraphs, each developing a
topic, which is usually announced in the initial
topic sentence - 1. What to expect for 2009
- 2. In politics Obama will become Americas first
black president - 3. In politics beyond America many countries
will be involved in elections (e.g. India,
Germany) - 4. In the economy the economic crisis will
continue - 5. Some countries of the emerging world will
still do quite well - 6. Global warming will be a cause for concern
- 7. Plenty of fun in 2009!
- 8. Will predictions prove true?
4TEXT 4, Paragraph 1
- a.Anyone hoping for a period of calm after the
turbulence of the past year will be disappointed.
- b. For the economy and for business, as well as
for politics, 2009 promises to be a year of
bracing adjustment to a changed world
- a. Use of understatement
- ---------------------------------------------
- b. Bracing (1) cold in a way that makes you
feel full of energy - Bracing (2) shocking or unexpected in a way
that is good because it makes people aware of
something - Adjustment (1) a change of attitude or
behaviour
- Adjustment (2) a change that makes something
better - 1) TONIFICANTE ADATTAMENTO A UN MONDO
COMPLETAMENTE CAMBIATO - 2) IN CUI CI SI DOVRA PER FORZA RENDERE CONTO
CHE IL MONDO E CAMBIATO/ - 3. IN CUI SI DOVRA FARE APPELLO A TUTTE LE
PROPRIE FORZE PER AFFRONTARE IL CAMBIAMENTO IN
ATTO
5REFERENCES TO PEOPLE AND PLACES For what
READERSHIP?
- Obama Americas first black presidenta
remarkable achievement and a remarkable
opportunity . A Democratic Congress - India the world biggest democracy
- Germany Europes largest economy
- The whole 27-country European Union / The
European Parliament - Indonesia the worlds most populous Muslim
country - South Africa, Iran, Afghanistan pivotal places
- Brazil, Russia, India, Russia countries of the
emerging world - Post-Kyoto agreement
- Dubai
- Barbie
- Asterix
- Year of Astronomy, 400 years after Galileo
- Israel/Syria
- Queen Elisabeth II
6TEXT 4 , PARA 7Shift to a more informal, and
humorous tone
- If all this sounds a bit earnest, dont worry
there will be plenty of fun in 2009 as well.
Dubai will open the worlds tallest building,
China the worlds biggest Ferris wheel. Barbie
and Astérix will celebrate their 50th birthdays.
Africans will enjoy a new fascination with maps,
thanks to the internet, while soaring numbers of
twitchers in China will indulge in a new
fascination with birds. Scientists will map the
brain as well as search for Earth-like planetsin
what will be the International Year of Astronomy,
400 years after Galileo first peered through a
telescope.
7Text 4, Paragraph 8 ALTERNATING SERIOUS AND
LIGHT MATTERS
- As always this volume is full of predictions, a
few of which may actually prove right. This time
weve even included several things we think
probably wont happen, though they just might
forecasts whose chance of coming true falls
roughly between 5 and 20. Might 2009 see a
peace deal between Israel and Syria, a cure for
cancer or the abdication of Queen Elizabeth II?
Probably not. But you read it here first.
8Two semantic fields the economic crisis and the
environment
- The aftershocks of the financial crisis
rumbling on - Extraordinary boom
- GDP (Gross Domestic Product) PIL Prodotto
Interno Lordo ) / rise - Global growth (spectacular/ robust/ slide below)
- Rich economies face recession
- Bankruptcies
- Belt-tightening
- Unemployment
- (cherished) perks
- (visionary) bosses
- The chief financial officer
- Cash
- Opportunities
- Buy competitors on the cheap
- environment
- (to tackle) global warming
- To cut greenhouse emissions
- Climate change
- Carbon trading
- Water shortages
- Alternative energy
9COMPARISON OF TWO ARTICLES ABOUT THE SAME TOPIC
FROM RHETORICAL AND AUTHORIAL STRATEGIES TO
LEXICAL CHOICES TEXT 5
TEXT 6
- From The Times , February 10, 2009
- By Richard Owen
- Right to die coma woman Eluana Englaro dies
- The photo of E. Englaro with the caption
Eluana Englaro was in a coma for 17 years
- From The Economist print edition, feb.12 2009
- Italy and the right to die
- Death in Udine
- What the row about Eluana Englaro says about
Italy and its political rulers - The photo of E. Englaro with the caption a
bright 21-year old, 17 years ago
10TEXT 5 TEXT 6
- Eluana Englaro, the comatose woman at the centre
of a euthanasia debate that has divided Italy and
sparked a constitutional crisis, died last night
at the age of 38, four days after doctors began
to remove her life support. - May the Lord welcome her and pardon those who
brought her to this point, a senior Vatican
official said. - The news of Ms Englaros death came as the Upper
House of parliament began debating emergency
legislation rushed out by the centre-right
Government of Silvio Berlusconi. It would have
ordered medical staff to restore all nutrients.
She had been in a vegetative state for 17 years
after a car accident. - Ms Englaros father, Beppino Englaro, had been
fighting for a decade for a dignified end to his
daughters life in accordance with what he and
her friends have testified were her own wishes.
At his request doctors at a clinic in Udine
stopped feeding Ms Englaro on Friday. - The news of Ms Englaros death was given first
to her father by Amato De Monte, the anaesthetist
at the Udine clinic. Yes, she has left us, Mr
Englaro announced.
- ON FEBRUARY 6th, at a clinic in Udine in
north-east Italy, doctors withdrew nutritional
support from a woman in an irreversible coma.
Three days later, more quickly than expected,
38-year-old Eluana Englaro died of a heart attack
brought on by dehydration. - Similar things happen every day in other parts of
Europe. But in Italy this was a national drama.
Outside the clinic, pro-life and pro-choice
demonstrators came to blows. On national
television, programming was suspended so that Ms
Englaros death could be discussed. In the upper
house of parliament, which was debating a bill to
keep Ms Englaro alive, there was uproar. Eluana
has been killed, cried a leading member of
Silvio Berlusconis governing People of Freedom
(PDL) movementa phrase the prime minister
himself repeated soon afterwards. - The affair highlighted two characteristics of
todays Italy. One is the enduring influence of
the Catholic church and its teaching on the
sanctity of life. The other is its prime
ministers impatience with the rule of law.
11TEXT 5 TEXT 6
- 6. The Senate interrupted the debate and observed
a minutes silence as a mark of respect. After
the silence came recriminations. She didnt die.
She was killed, Gaetano Quagliarello, a
centre-right senator, shouted, while others
screamed murderers, murderers towards the
Opposition benches. - 7. Mr Berlusconis law would make it illegal for
carers of people unable to take care of
themselves to suspend artificial feeding.
Euthanasia is illegal in Italy but refusing
treatment is not. - 8 The Prime Minister expressed deep pain and
regret that he had failed to save Ms Englaros
life but government officials vowed to push the
Bill through. I hope the Senate can proceed on
the established calendar so that this sacrifice
wasnt completely in vain, Maurizio Sacconi, the
Health Minister, told legislators minutes after
she
- After a nine-year struggle, Ms Englaros father
won a ruling from Italys highest appeal court
that his daughter should be allowed to die. A key
point was that she had apparently stated a
preference, before her car accident, for not
being kept alive artificially. The Vatican was
appalled, seeing the judgment as licensing
euthanasia. Mr Berlusconis health minister and
PDL regional officials set about trying to thwart
the judgment by bureaucratic means. Until then,
Ms Englaro had been in a church-run institution,
so she had to be moved. But fear of reprisals
deterred most hospitals and hospices from taking
her. - On February 3rd, however, she was admitted to the
clinic in Udine. Soon afterwards Mr Berlusconi
changed tack. His cabinet approved a decree
which, had it been countersigned by President
Giorgio Napolitano, would have forced Ms
Englaros doctors to continue treatment.
12TEXT 5 TEXT 6
- 6 Why? There were no votes to be had. Polls
suggested that a large majority of Italians
backed Ms Englaros right to die. Mr Berlusconi
scarcely seems like a committed Catholic. Rarely
seen in church, he is a divorcee who had the
first of his children by his second wife even
while he was married to the first. Opponents
claimed that he wanted to inflict a defeat on the
judiciary ahead of a law reform later this year,
and that he also hoped to cow the president as
part of a broader strategy aimed at taking over
the presidency himself and giving Italy what his
admirers say would be a more decisive form of
presidential government. - 7. Undaunted, Mr Napolitano refused to sign the
decree, forcing Mr Berlusconi to rejig it as a
parliamentary bill. Ms Englaro died before it
could be rushed through. But Mr Berlusconi had
already given a glimpse of the populist side of
his political character. If there were not a
chance of resorting to decrees, he said, I
would go back to the people to ask for the
changing of the constitution and the government.
- 9. Mr Berlusconi drew up the Bill after President
Napolitano refused to sign an emergency decree
last week on constitutional grounds. Mr
Napolitano said that the decree contradicted a
Supreme Court ruling last November that gave Ms
Englaros father permission to find doctors who
would end her life. - 10 The Vatican and Roman Catholic Church had
opposed the ruling fiercely and were swift to
respond to news of Ms Englaros death. Cardinal
Javier Lozano Barragán, the Vatican Health
Minister, said I will continue to regard her
death as a crime. Earlier Cardinal Angelo
Bagnasco, head of the Italian Episcopal
Conference, declared that refusing food and water
to Ms Englaro was murder. A light is going out,
the light of a life, he said. - 11 For the third day in succession Pope Benedict
XVI referred indirectly to the case, declaring
yesterday that the sanctity of life must be
safeguarded from conception to its natural end. - The tussle over Ms Englaros life has revived
accusations that the Vatican is dictating Italian
politics.Mr Berlusconi, who had previously stayed
out of the controversy, reportedly reacted after
Cardinale Tarcisio Berton, the Vatican,s
Secretary of State, implored him to stop this
crime against humanity
13TEXT 5
- 13 In response to accusations that he was
bowing to pressure from the Church, The Prime
minister said that he represented the feelings of
most Italians. Opinion polls suggested that
Italians were divided, with 47 percent in favour
of Ms Englaros right to die, 47 per cent against
and 6 percent undecided. - s Englaros longtime neurologist, Carlo Alberto
Defanti, predicted last week that his patient
could remain alive for another eight to ten days.
During the first week without food and water,
Eluana wont run a big risk, Dr Defanti said in
an interview published yesterday. Her physical
condition is excellent. Probably . . . she will
resist for longer than average. Apart from her
brain injuries Eluana is a healthy woman. She has
never been ill and never taken antibiotics. - Dr Defanti admitted last night that Ms Englaros
death had come more swiftly than expected. It
was something we did not foresee, he said. - Ms Englaro was called Italys Terri Schiavo, in
reference to the American woman in a vegetative
state who was allowed to die in 2005 after a long
legal fight. Mr Englaro battled his way through
Italys courts for ten years to have her feeding
tube disconnected, saying that it was her wish
not to be kept alive artificially - Romes right-wing mayor, Gianni Alemanno,
announced that the Colosseum would be lit all
night in a sign of mourning for a life that
could have and should have been saved.
- 8 Tense relations between Mr Berlusconi and Mr
Napolitano may not be the only legacy of this
affair. It has also generated widespread
parliamentary support for a law that would enable
people to draw up living wills, stipulating how
they wish to be treated in the event of losing
consciousness. The idea is to avert similar
disputes in future. But Ms Englaro was 21 when
she had her car accident. Is it likely that she
would have made a living will at such an early
age?
14TEXT 7 , The Economist, Nov.13th 2008 A case for
changeUniversities desperately need reformyet
resist change
- Some selected references to how Italian
universities are described. - The entire examining board made by octogenarians
- The retirement age for Italian university
teachers is 72 - the worst managed, worst performing and most
corrupt sectors in Italy - Italian universities are not over-funded
- Overweening power of the BARONI (barons), or
tenured professors - The power of academic life and death
- faculties as personal fiefs
- Nepotism and favouritism creation of jobs for
relatives and friendscronyism - Proliferation of courses and departments
- Some valuable research and inspirational teaching
- Uniform mediocrity
- Five universities are bankrupt
- Not one Italian institution is in the top 100 of
the 2008 Times Higher Education World University
rankings. - The Baroni wield considerable influence over
goverments, particularly of the centre-left, and
have used it to bury most attempts at reform
All this might seem good news for
15TEXT 7. Final paragraph
- All this might seem good for students and
teachers. Yet students have staged protests
around the country. This week the main trade
union federations planned a national strike,
though one of them pulled out at the last minute.
The opposition argues that no good will come of
reforms inspired by cost reduction. But the
government retorts that Italy's ultra-low birth
rate has created what Ms Gelmini calls "an
historic opportunity" to raise quality while
spending less. At least her plans deserve a fair
hearing