Title: Tiananmen Square
1Tiananmen Square
I have written a good deal about the Tiananmen
Square massacre, but it remains a perpetually
painful subject for me.
2About JS (1)
- 1944 Born near Blackpool
- His parents separated when he was 7, and he chose
to live with his father - He studied English at Cambridge, and edited the
magazine Granta - He married twice. His present wife is his
producer, Dee Kruger.
3About JS (2)
- 1966 joined the BBC as sub-editor in Radio News,
but found the job unsuitable. - He worked his way up to BBC correspondent in
Ireland in the early 1970s, and has remained
almost always on the foreign beat since then. - Awards
- Royal Television Society Journalist of the
Year in 1991 and 2000 - a CBE in the Gulf War Honours
- an RTS award for International Current Affairs
in 1996 - a Peabody Trust Award for News
- The One World Best Bi-Media News award
4JS the Writer (1)
- Why does he write?
- He sees it as a way to deal with his strong
emotions when reporting. - I had the most terrible dreams. The day after
that, I had to write an article about it. And the
act of writing and working through it as honestly
as I was able seemed to deal with it and put it
in its placeit doesn't haunt me. - Now he writes a weekly column for the Sunday
Telegraph.
5JS the Writer (2)
- Wars Against Saddam- The Hard Road to
Baghdad (2003) - Simpson's World Dispatches from the Front Lines
(2003) - News From No Mans Land Reporting the
World (2002) - A Mad World, My Masters Tales from a Traveller's
Life (2000) - Strange Places, Questionable People (1998)
6JS the Broadcaster (1)
- 1988 appointed World Affairs Editor presents
the Nine oclock News and Simpsons World. - Being a broadcaster is like
- - a humble salesman
- A news bulletin is a market economy, with
buyers and sellers, winners and losers. I am
merely a travelling salesman, whose stock in
trade is a pack of pictures, facts and
conclusions.
7Broadcaster JS (2)
- Glamarous job, and makes him feel proud
- I have reported from 101 countries, interviewed
120 emperors, monarchs, presidents, dictators,
prime ministers and other assorted rulers,
despotic, loony, or occasionally sane, and
witnessed 29 wars, uprisings and revolutions. - Recent projects include covering
- war in Afghanistan
- It was only BBC people who liberated
- this city. We got in ahead of Northern
- Alliance troops.
8- The job is sometimes dangerous. What makes him
keep on? -
- when it was theoretical and far away, I took
pleasure in the feeling that I was going to a
place which most sensible people would avoid. I
told myself I wouldnt allow myself to be kept
away from somewhere beautiful and interesting,
just because of the death rate.
9Events Simpson reported on in 1989 Background of
article (1)
Soviet Union pulled out from Afghanistan
Tiananmen Square demonstration and massacre
Fall of Berlin Wall
Revolutions in Czechoslovakia and Romania
10Background of article (2)
- Snapshot within snapshots
- there are some things which a snapshot can
convey, and a proper studio portrait cannot the
confusion, the small details, the emotions, and
the smells and sounds.
11Background of article (3)
- Tiananmen Square massacre
- - Following the death of former general
secretary of the Communist Party Hu Yaobang,
university students took to the streets and took
over Tiananmen Square to ask for changes,
notably regarding democracy. - - The protest was gradually joined by citizens
from different parts of China. - - After several failed attempts to persuade the
people to leave, the government ordered the
Chinese army to clear the square, with force if
necessary on the night of June 3 and the morning
of June 4, 1989. - - The number of people who died is publicly
unknown.
12Background of article (4)
- JS actually didnt go to Beijing to report on its
political turmoil. He was there to cover
Gorbachevs historic visit to China, which came
after nearly 20 years of standoff between the two
communist countries. - But the demonstrations in the square were a big
story too, and became even bigger.
13- Later, Bill Buford, editor of Granta, asked JS to
write about the subject, and the article was
published in September, 1989. - His cooperation with Buford led to his writing
several descriptive scenes in the piece - - scenes of soldiers being killed
- - sound and smell
14The Plot
- A plot is a narrative of events, the emphasis
falling on causality. The king died and then the
queen died is a story. The king died, and then
the queen died of grief is a plot. - E.M. Forster
15The Story Plot (1)
- External about JSs encounters on his way to and
in Tiananmen Square on that night - Internal about JSs emotional journey
- Sraightforward way of putting events, in
chronological order - Pace alternatively slow and fast, rather like a
horizontal wave on a long spring
It was humid and airless (p.347)
People were shouting (p.348)
We pushed our way towards (p.348)
And then, suddenly, everything changed (p.348)
16The Story Plot (2)
- Mysterious suspense the climax is a scene
where the soldiers are killed. - Theme
- - It was hard to define the mood. There was
still a spirit of celebrationbut the spirit was
also giving way to a terrible forebodinga
reckless ferocity of purpose. (p.349) - - the river of change had been damned, and below
me in the avenue where it had run, people were
dying (p.353)
17Characters
- You would have me, when I describe horse
thieves, say Stealing horses is evil. But that
has been known for ages without my saying so. Let
the jury judge them its my job simply to show
what sort of people they are. Anton Chekhov
18Characters (1) Students
- Rather sympathetic, and depicted the students as
innocent, naïve, peaceful their intent is best
and noblest. - A boy displayed his weapons, laughing all the
time. (p.349) - A couple clung to each other, her head on his
shoulder. (p.349) - The student who asked him to sign his t-shirt.
(p.349) whats he doing? Why does he still care
for the signature? - The students trying to save the soldiers. (p.351)
19Characters (2) The mob
- so animal-like, fierce and violent, that he
finally intruded and stopped them - They were from the factorieslook aggressive,
even piraticallooking forward to trouble.
(p.348) - A terrible shout of triumph came from the crowd
primitive and dark, its prey finally caught.
(p.350) - All around me the men seemed to be yelling at the
sky, their faces lit up. (p.351) - The killing of the soldiers his body dragged
away in triumphtheir mouths were open and
panting, like dogs
20Characters (3) John Simpson
- A journalist-observer
- - Details differed, and I had trouble finding
out what was being said(p.348) - - We will all die. (p.349) why didnt him
ask the student to go? - A proud and confident one
- - I felt especially conspicuous. But I also
felt good(p.349) - - He argued with his colleagues and then left.
(p.349)
21- Brutal hitting the people to reunite with his
colleagues (p.350), stupid obscenities. - overwhelmed And all the time the noise and the
heat and the stench of oil burning overwhelming
our senses, deadening them. (p.351) - panic when the armoured personnel carrier was
pointing at him (p.350) - Wake up to his conscience Hes rather
cool-headed at first, pulling the cameraman back.
The ferocity of the crowd had entered mebut he
saved a life in the end (hes explaining why he
didnt do anything before)
22Symbols
- A symbol assumes two planes, two worlds of ideas
and sensations, and a dictionary of
correspondences between them. - Albert Camus
23Symbols (1)
- Bland, moonlike portrait of Chairman Mao
- Over the Gate of Heavenly Peace there hung the
portrait of Chairman Mao, the founder of a new
dynasty. I was unable to take my eyes off it. It
was a masterwork of utter blandness. This was the
man whose whims had cost more lives than
Stalins, and yet there was no expression
whatever No cunning, No anxiety, No past. It was
a portrait of facelessness, and yet it was
exactly true to life.
24Symbols (2)
- Hypnotists voice
- The thoughts of government, the voice the people
of China had been listening to for forty years - Goddess of Democracy, with her sightless eyes
- The symbol of all our aspirations, the fruit of
our struggle, looked very fragile
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