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UNIT 1 Global news in English

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INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS OF NEWPAPERS AND MAGAZINES (e.g. The Herald Tribune, The Economist) ... The Herald Tribune. Los Angeles Time. USA Today. Tabloid: Daily ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: UNIT 1 Global news in English


1
UNIT 1 Global news in English
  • TELEVISION (satellite and cable) e.g. BBC
    World, CNN
  • RADIO NEWS e.g BBC Radio World Service
  • NEWSPAPERS WITH A WORLD NEWS COVERAGE
  • (e.g. The Financial Times, The New York
    Times)
  • INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS OF NEWPAPERS AND MAGAZINES
    (e.g. The Herald Tribune, The Economist)
  • NEWS AGENCIES (e.g. Reuters, Ansa)
  • INTERNET ALTERNATIVE NEWS (e.g. personal blogs,
    forums, websites e.g. http//indymedia.org
  • (for a longer list see Slides from Past
    courses 2007-8 in my website)

2
A brief history of the British press (Part
1)(see the Website of the British Library, A
concise history of British journalism and the
Britannica Encyclopaedia)
  • The invention of the printing press (1447) opened
    the era of the modern newspaper
  • In the 17th century newspapers began to appear
    regularly in European countries. They usually
    covered foreign rather than domestic issues
    because of censorship The first daily newspaper
    in England was The Daily Courant (1702).
  • In the 18th century men of letters like Addison
    and Steele and dr. Johnson wrote essays
    addressed to the middle class in the magazines
    The Spectator or The Tatler. The novelist Daniel
    Defoe published the magazine The Review and is
    considered the father of the English editorial.
    1785-88 The Times was launched.

3
A brief history of the British Press (part II)
  • In the 19th century the reduction of taxes and
    the development of technology ( the telegraph was
    invented in 1844) helped print media, allowing
    for timely report of events. The first penny
    paper, The Daily Telegraph, was founded in 1855.
    Most present-day newspapers were launched as well
    as the Sunday papers.
  • The beginning of the 20th century was the golden
    age of print media, which became financial
    empires and had a major influence on events such
    as wars and elections
  • In the 20th century newspapers were forced to
    compete, and come to terms, first with the radio
    (in the 20s), later with television (in the
    40s) and recently with the Internet. Popular or
    tabloid newspapers developed to suit the needs of
    a less educated readership.

4
The British Press in the Internet era(Part III)
  • Almost every adult in Britain reads or sees a
    daily newspaper and many people remain loyal to a
    particular paper for life, OALD Ecyclopedic
    Edition, 1992 (Is it still true today?)
  • The Economist has predicted that generalist
    newspapers will die by 2050

5
The British Press
  • Types of newspapers
  • National (11) or regional / local ( very many)
  • Daily papers (11) versus Sunday editions (12)
  • Quality (heavies/broadsheets,upmarket) The
    Times ( since 1785), The Guardian (since 1825),
    The Daily Telegraph (since 1855), The Financial
    Times (1888), The Independent (1986)
  • popular (tabloids, gutter press) The Sun (since
    1964), The Daily Mirror ( since 1903), Daily Mail
    (since 1896), Daily Express ( since 1900), Daily
    Star (1978), Morning Star (since 1930)

6
The British Press recent developments (Part IV)
  • THE MOST POPULAR NEWSPAPER IS THE SUN (more than
    3 million copies sold per day).
  • NEWSPAPER READERSHIP HAS BEEN DECREASING SINCE
    THE MID 90S, ESPECIALLY AMONG THE YOUNG
  • MANY BROADSHEETS HAVE RECENTLY GONE COMPACT
  • MANY NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES HAVE AN ELECTRONIC
    VERSION
  • FREES (FREE NEWSPAPERS DISTRIBUTED IN BIG
    CITIES OR IN THE UNDERGROUND e.g. Metro) ARE
    BECOMING VERY POPULAR
  • THE SPECIALIST PRESS IS MORE POPULAR THAN THE
    GENERALIST PRESS

7
Some landmarks in the American Press (Part I)
  • The birth of the modern newspaper is linked to
    the American Revolution, to the name of Benjamin
    Franklin and to the political debate after the
    Independence of the American colonies at the end
    of the I8th century.
  • In the 19th century the freedom of the Press was
    guaranteed by a constitutional amendment. The
    popular and sensational yellow press coexisted
    with other newspapers committed to serious
    news-reporting ( Slogan of The New York Times,
    It will not soil the breakfast cloth)
  • 1851 The New York Times was founded
  • In the 20th century a very high number of
    newspapers has been launched, but very few have a
    national readership. Some newspapers have several
    national and international editions. After 1995
    all the most important ones have developed an
    online edition
  • Growth of the ethnic press
  • Customized/personal news

8
The American Press (part II)
  • 1,452 dailies with a total of 51 million copies
    sold, but the readership has been steadily
    decreasing in the last 40 years ( see State of
    News Media 2007)
  • Main quality newspapers
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • The New York Times
  • The Washington Post
  • The Herald Tribune
  • Los Angeles Time
  • USA Today
  • Tabloid
  • Daily News
  • New York Post
  • Alternative/radical/independent Press
  • The Village Voice
  • Mother Jones
  • Ethnic Press
  • Ebony
  • Develoment of on-line news
  • Global Voices, Moveone.org, Slate

9
TEXT 3 Fresh, Raw Milk on Tap in Turin, Italy
  • Torino, Italia il latte fresco crudo esce dal
    rubinetto
  • Latte crudo, fresco di giornata, (alla spina) a
    Torino
  • Succede a Torino a Eataly si può comprare il
    latte fresco crudo
  • Latte fresco crudo a gogo a Torino
  • Torino, latte fresco crudo per i buongustai

10
Suggested translation of TEXT 3 from the New
York Times
  • On a recent trip to Turin, I visited Eataly, a
    food lovers paradise that is part food hall,
    part classroom and part wine shop almost all of
    it local and artisanal. Situated in the former
    Carpano vermouth factory, Eataly is to Turin what
    Peck is to Milan and La Grande Epicerie is to
    Paris.
  • Durante un recente viaggio a Torino, ho visitato
    Eataly, un paradiso dei buongustai, che è negozio
    ma anche scuola di prodotti di alta
    enogastronomia, quasi tutti locali e artigianali.
    Situato in quella che era un tempo la fabbrica
    del vermut Carpano, Eataly è per Torino quello
    che Beck è per Milano e La Grande Epicerie per
    Parigi.

pm
11
(follows)
  • What really caught my attention wasnt the
    fresh-baked breads, the fish market next to the
    fish grill or the cheese stand near the cozy
    pizza and wine bar, but a large, unassuming box
    near the bread section. On it was a life-size
    photo of an adorable cow with a sign that read,
    Latte crudo 1 euro, and a newspaper article
    about the health benefits of raw milk. Every
    morning a local farmer delivers his cows milk to
    Eataly, where its pumped into the cooler. As
    with bulk filtered-water fixtures at many Whole
    Foods (sorry, New Yorkers, I havent seen any
    here yet), customers either bring their own
    bottle or buy a new one and fill it up. One euro
    for a liter of fresh raw milk? Incredible.
  • La mia attenzione è stata attirata non tanto dai
    diversi tipi di pane fresco, dal mercatino del
    pesce vicino alla rosticceria o dal banco dei
    formaggi vicino allaccogliente locale per
    mangiarsi una pizza e bere un bicchiere di vino,
    ma un grosso contenitore senza pretese vicino al
    settore del pane. Mostrava la fotografia a
    grandezza naturale di una adorabile mucca con
    accanto una scritta che diceva Latte crudo, 1
    euro e un articolo di giornale sui vantaggi del
    latte crudo per la salute. Ogni mattina un
    agricoltore/contadino della zona porta/consegna
    a Eataly il latte delle sue mucche, che viene
    messo (pompato) dentro un refrigeratore. Come
    nel caso dei grandi distributori di acqua
    filtrata che si trovano in molti supermercati
    americani e britannici della catena Whole Foods
    (peccato che io non ne abbia ancora visti a New
    York!), i clienti portano la loro bottiglia o ne
    comprano una nuova e la riempiono. Un euro per un
    litro di latte fresco crudo? Incredibile!

12
(Follows)
  • As far as I know, this country doesnt have
    anything like Eataly. And in New York, raw milk,
    a hot food topic these days, can only be bought
    at one of 19 dairy farms approved by the state.
  • The exciting news plans are in the works for a
    New York City Eataly, possibly as early as this
    November. The raw milk station? Unlikely.
  • Per quanto ne so io, lAmerica non ha niente di
    simile a Eataly. A New York, il latte crudo è un
    argomento molto discusso. Può essere acquistato
    solo presso 19 aziende agricole /caseifici
    certificate/i dallo stato.
  • Una bella notizia è imminente lapertura di un
    negozio di Eataly a New York, forse già il
    prossimo novembre. Verrà anche venduto latte
    crudo? E poco probabile.

13
Some corpus collocations in English and in
Italian with milk/latte
  • Skimmed
  • Semi-skimmed
  • Full-fat
  • Creamy
  • Fresh
  • Raw
  • Boiled
  • Condensed
  • Powdered
  • Pasteurised
  • Sour
  • Long-life
  • formula
  • Scremato
  • Parzialmente scremato
  • Intero
  • Cremoso
  • Fresco
  • Crudo
  • Bollito
  • Condensato
  • In polvere
  • Pastorizzato
  • Acido/andato a male
  • A lunga conservazione
  • Per bambini piccoli

14
SOME POSITIVE ENGLISH /ITALIAN COLLOCATIONS
WITH FOOD/CIBO
  • ORGANIC (farming)
  • HOME-COOKED
  • HEALTHY/ HEALTH
  • WHOLESOME
  • QUALITY
  • FRESH
  • ARTISANAL
  • LOCAL
  • NATURAL
  • WHOLEFOOD (noun)
  • BIOLOGICO agricoltura
  • Fatto in casa
  • SANO
  • GENUINO
  • DI QUALITA
  • FRESCO
  • ARTIGIANALE ( e.g. prodotti, panificazione,
  • pasticceria)
  • LOCALE
  • NATURALE
  • ALIMENTI INTEGRALI (noun)

15
Is newspaper discourse specialized discourse?
  • A newspapers contains several genres
  • information (e.g. weather forecast, sport
    results, statistics),
  • opinion (e.g. editorial, op-ed, letters),
  • news (the 5 main Wh words Who, what, where,
    when, why),
  • feature articles (facts/events but usually
    including the authors explicit or implicit
    opinion, or stance)
  • What is newsworthy?
  • negativity, recency, proximity, relevance,
    personalization, facticity,
  • continuity, competition, predictability
  • clarity, brevity, colour, liveliness
  • What is the source of the news?
  • the journalists firsthand experience,
  • data, specialised literature
  • reported facts,
  • news agencies

16
Some features of journalistic style
  • Conciseness (e.g. headlines, nominalisations)
  • Attention-getting devices (e.g. headlines,
    graphics, pictures, captions, puns, humour,
    clichés, metaphors and metonyms)
  • How to report opinions ( e.g. direct or indirect
    speech, authors explicit or implicit
    stance/evaluation)
  • Lexical choices, e.g. lexis in specialized areas,
    such as politics, sport, economy, food
  • Naming /labelling of people or things
  • Syntactic choices tenses, active or passive
    voice, modality, marked and unmarked word order

17
Main features of an online newspaper
  • It is regularly updated
  • It has no limit of space and gives the
    opportunity to consult the archives, retrace and
    download old articles through key word search
  • It is multimodal, e.g. it includes photos, video
    and audio features
  • It may provide background information and
    related materials through links
  • It is interactive, e.g. it may allow readers to
    write comments and it may highlight the most
    popular articles
  • It may be either totally or partially free, or
    require a subscription fee

18
From the THE ECONOMIST website
  • first published in 1843
  • It goes to press on Thursdays and, printed
    simultaneously in six countries, is available in
    most of the world's main cities the following day
    or soon after.
  • it covers world business and current affairs,
    providing authoritative insight and opinion on
    international news, world politics, business,
    finance, science and technology, as well as
    overviews of cultural trends and regular
    industry, business and country special reports.
  • What, besides free trade and free markets, does
    The Economist believe in? "It is to the Radicals
    that The Economist still likes to think of itself
    as belonging. The extreme centre is the paper's
    historical position. It considers itself the
    enemy of privilege, pomposity and predictability.
    It has backed conservatives such as Ronald Reagan
    and Margaret Thatcher. It has supported the
    Americans in Vietnam. But it has also endorsed
    Harold Wilson and Bill Clinton, and espoused a
    variety of liberal causes opposing capital
    punishment from its earliest days, while
    favouring penal reform and decolonisation, as
    well asmore recentlygun control and gay
    marriage.

19
The Financial Times
  • British business and financial newspaper.
  • It is now printed in Frankfurt.
  • It has a UK, a European, a US and an Asian
    editions.
  • Launched in 1888
  • Published as a broadsheet in pink coloured pages
  • In 1995 it launched its website
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