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AN INTEGRATED ENGLISH COURSE

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Discussion about Text II. I. Pre-reading discussion. 1. Is personal space ... Edward T Hall created a word Proxemics (???) and discussed the communication ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AN INTEGRATED ENGLISH COURSE


1
AN INTEGRATED ENGLISH COURSE
  • Gao Yufen
  • English Department R-406Nancy5815_at_sina.com847244
    83

2
UNIT 2
  • Text 1 Space Invaders

3
Teaching Points
  • I. Pre-reading discussion
  • II. Introduction
  • III. Text Analysis
  • IV. Questions
  • V. Structural analysis and Rhetorical features
  • VI. Discussion about Text II

4
I. Pre-reading discussion
  • 1. Is personal space important to you? Why or hwy
    not?
  • 2. Do we have a weaker sense of personal space
    than the Westerners?

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II. Introduction
  • About the author
  • Culture and Communication
  • Space

10
The Structure of Culture
11
Communication
12
Communication
13
Definitions
  • Verbal communication refers to the communication
    which is carried out in either oral or written
    form with the use of words.
  • Nonverbal communication refers to the
    communication through ones voice qualities,
    facial expressions, gestures, bodily movement,
    attitudes towards space and time, etc.

14
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15
Space
  • American famous anthropologist Edward T Hall
    created a word Proxemics (???) and discussed the
    communication among people in short distance. He
    stated that the change of space will influence
    the communication among people.

16
Space Patterns
  • Hall classified space into 3 kinds (1966)
  • 1. Fixed-feature space
  • 2. Semi-fixed-feature space
  • 3. Informal space bubble of personal space.

17
III. Text Explanations
  • In the text, the writer points out that nowadays
    people are more and more concerned about
    themselves and want to have a larger personal
    space than decades ago, and then he analyses the
    causes of space invasion

18
Paragraphs 1-2 Analysis
  • The first two paragraphs tell us about the
    authors experience of how his personal space was
    invaded and how his individual border was
    intruded on.

19
Language Work
  • 1.  snakemove in a twisting way
  • The train was snaking its way through the
    mountains
  • 2. some tried velvet ropessome slackened
    velvet ropes
  • 3. a sweat-suita loose cotton garment for the
    upper part of the body a sort of T-shirt
  • 4.  inchmove very slowly and carefully
  • Howard inched the van forward.
  • 5. sidlewalk in a timid manner, especially
    sideways or obliquely
  • A man sidled up to me and asked if I wanted a
    ticket for the match.

20
  • 6. shufflewalk by dragging ones feet along or
    without lifting them fully from the ground
  • He slipped on his shoes and shuffled out of
    the room.
  • A fat woman was shuffling along with a
    pushchair.
  • Shuffle something offavoid talking or thinking
    about something because it is not considered
    important
  • He shuffled the question off and changed the
    topic.
  • Shuffle out of somethingtry to avoid some
    unpleasant task by acting dishonestly
  • I mistrust the way in which they shuffle out of
    sustained efforts.

21
  • 7.in mild annoyancewith a little anger or
    impatience
  • mildnot very great in degree
  • We looked at each other in mild astonishment.
  • 8.  scribblewrite or draw (something)
    carelessly or hurriedly
  • 9.  until we were all hugger-mugger against
    each other, the original lazy line having
    collapsed in on itself like a Slinky. until
    we were all pushing against each other, leaving
    the line in a disorder.
  • Hugger-muggerconfused, disorderly

22
  • 10. The phrase personal space has a quaint,
    seventies ring to it
  • quaintattractively unusual or old-fashioned
  • seventies1970s, in which American people
    talked a lot about personal space
  • ringa quality, or an impression of having the
    quality that is mentioned
  • Her story had a ring of truth about it.
  • The books he mentioned had a familiar ring about
    them.

23
  • 11. but it is one of those gratifying
    expressions that are intuitively understood by
    all human beings. but it is still one of the
    expressions which can be immediately understood
    by all people and give pleasure to people.
  • gratifyinggiving pleasure or satisfaction
  • The new plan may be gratifying to the President.

24
  • 12.penetratesucceed in forcing through
    something
  • They penetrated into the territory where no man
    had ever been before.
  • 13.make somebody uneasymake somebody feel
    anxious that something may be wrong or there may
    be some danger

25
Paragraphs 3-7 Analysis
  • This part shows that the phenomenon of invading
    personal space has become more and more serious
    in the current society. The writer gives several
    explanations to this pervasive phenomenon. The
    shrinking of personal space is due to factors
    such as the geographical space, the general
    decline of manners, and more and more impudent
    space invaders

26
  • 3)What does the author mean by saying personal
    space is mostly a public matter?
  • Personal space, first of all, is the space you
    expect and are expected to keep between you and
    other people in public places in order to
    maintain the appropriate interpersonal
    relationship. Edward T. Hall in The Hidden
    Dimension, for example, describes the social
    values applied by Americans to certain distances
    between people as falling into four main
    categories Intimate distance (0-11/2 feet),
    Personal distance (11/2-4 feet),
    Social/Consultative distance (4-10 feet), and
    Public distance (10 or more feet).

27
  • 4)Do space invaders respect other peoples
    personal space?
  • No. They want to have as much space to
    themselves as possible.

28
Language work
  • 14.  wedge?force into a narrow space
  • Open the door wide and wedge it with a pad of
    newspaper.
  • The people sitting close to me wedged me into
    the corner.
  • 15. zigzag?move forward by going at an angle
    first to one side then to the other
  • We zigzagged up the hill.
  • 16. jostle?push, elbow, or bump against
    (someone)roughly, typically in a crowd

29
  • 17. riders are no longer taking pains to carve
    out little zones of space.
  • carve out?establish or create something
    through painstaking effort
  • 18. press?push, move, or make (ones way)
    strongly, especially in a crowd
  • He pressed his way through the crowd.
  • So many people pressed round the famous
    actress that she couldnt get to her car.
  • 19.  fidgety?impatient or uneasy

30
  • 20. attribute to?believe (something) to be
    the result of
  • Jim attributes his success to hard work/to how
    hard he has always worked/ to working hard.
  • 21. Malthusian logic?Malthus, Thomas Robert
    (1766-1834), British economist and clergyman.

31
  • 22. Ive wondered if its the reason T-shirt
    weather can make proximity more alluring (or
    much, much less). ? I have suspected that maybe
    the cause (of the space invasion) is the reason
    summer may either make people want to be closer
    to each other or more likely to keep a distance
    between each other.
  • T-shirt weather refers to the weather in which
    people wear T-shirts, mainly, in summer.
  • alluring?powerfully attractive or charming

32
  • 23. Or perhaps the proliferation of coffee
    bars in Manhattan is infusing so much caffeine
    into the already jangling locals that people can
    no longer keep to themselves. ? Or perhaps the
    increasing coffee bars in Manhattan attract more
    and more people, who are stimulated and excited
    by the caffeine, so that they become eager to
    meet others and no longer want to remain in
    privacy.

33
Paragraph 5
  • Personal space, first of all, is the space you
    expect and are expected to keep between you and
    other people in public places in order to
    maintain the appropriate interpersonal
    relationship. Edward T. Hall in The Hidden
    Dimension, for example, describes the social
    values applied by Americans to certain distances
    between people as falling into four main
    categories Intimate distance (0-11/2 feet),
    Personal distance (11/2-4 feet),
    Social/Consultative distance (4-10 feet), and
    Public distance (10 or more feet).

34
IV. Questions
  • 1. How did the author describe the violation of
    personal space that happened in a bank?
  • 2. What does the author mean by saying personal
    space is mostly a public matter?
  • 3. Why is the personal space shrinking in general?

35
Structure Analysis and Rhetorical Features
  • Writing Style a piece of description
  • The causes of space invasion the writer
    attributes this phenomenon to population
    explosion first, then to the hot weather and the
    stimulation of caffine.
  • The nature of space invasion the writer thinks
    that space invasion is a public matter. It is
    more psychological than physical.

36
VI. Discussion about Text II
  • Space and Distance

37
Assignment
  • Write a short story
  • Prepare the new unit
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