Title: The Company Man
1Unit 5
2content
- Text one
- Text two
- Oral activity
- Exercises
3Text one
- Pre-reading questions
- Background information
- Vocabulary
- Structure analysis
- Comprehension questions
-
- Language points of Text I
4Text I The Company Man
- What do you think is the life of a typical
workaholic like? - 2. How important do you think work is to a
person? - 3. What drives people to overwork?
5Background information (1)
- About the text and the author
- Ellen Goodman(1941 ), journalist and columnist
who won a Pulitzer Prize in 1980 for commentary.
She has written for Newsweek, the Detroit Free
Press, and the Boston Globe. Her works include
Turning Points (1979), Close to Home (1979), and
At Large (1981).
6Background information (2)
- Ellen Goodman is an American original. Her
abundant talents, intellect, wit, style, news
judgment, set her apart with an élan uniquely her
own. Her Pulitzer Prize winning commentary
appears in more than 375 newspapers
7Background information (3)
- Goodman has been an innovative force in American
journalism. She once said, I think readers need
to be less alienated from editorial pages and
made them so by expanding the debate on op-ed
pages. She has commented on the tumult of social
change and its impact on families, and shattered
the mold of men writing exclusively about
politics. - Goodman brings new readers to editorial pages.
She is widely acclaimed as a voice of sanity, and
readers depend on her to help them make sense of
their changing lives and relationships. I have
always read Ellen Goodman, a Sarasota, Fla.,
reader says. She writes on issues that concern
me, no matter where Ive lived or where I moved.
8Background information (4)
- In 1980, Goodman was awarded the Pulitzer Prize
for Distinguished Commentary. - Goodmans work has won many other awards,
including the American Society of Newspaper
Editors Distinguished Writing Award in 1980. She
received the Hubert H. Humphrey Civil Rights
Award from the Leadership Conference on Civil
Rights in 1988. In 1993, at its Seventh Annual
Exceptional Merit Media Award Ceremony, The
National Womens Political Caucus gave her the
Presidents Award. In 1994, the Womens Research
Education Institute presented her with their
American Woman Award.
9Background information (5)
- Pulitzer Prize
- Any of several awards established by Joseph
Pulitzer and conferred annually for
accomplishment in various fields of American
journalism, literature, and music.
10Background information (6)
- 1. work while you work play while you play this
is the way to be cheerful and gay - 2. Never put off the work till tomorrow what you
can put off today. ???,??? - 3. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
???????,??????? - Work smarter, not harder.????? ??,??????????
- Work has a bitter root but sweet fruit.--German
proverb ????,????--?? ?? - Many hands make light work.??????? ??????
- Work makes the workman. ?????
11Structure analysis of the text (1)
- Paragraph 1
- This is an introductory paragraph.
- Paragraphs 2-6
- This part reports how devoted the man was to his
work. - Paragraphs 7-13
- This part describes Phils role in his family.
- Paragraph 14-16
- This is the concluding part. After the cause of
Phils death being restated, the author goes on
to report the company presidents inquire for his
successor.
12Structure analysis of the text (2)
- In a colloquial style, the author paints an
ironic picture of the cutthroat life of a company
man and his family. The man was a workaholic who
died of a heart attack, which surprised no one.
His wife lost him years ago to his work, and his
children did not know him well. To make her
writing more effective, the author uses
repetition and parallelism.
13Structure analysis of the text (3)
- Besides, she deliberately varies the length of
the sentences. By mixing some unusually short
sentences with the long ones, the author varies
their weight and achieves emphasis and impact.
For example, in Paragraph 3, the short sentence
Phil knew that. Follows two long sentences.
This helps avoid monotony is narration and
emphasize Phils awareness of the cutthroat
competition.
14Comprehension questions (1)
- 1. what is meant by the sentence she would be
well taken care of in Paragraph 8? - Key It means that the company Phil worked for
would provide some financial help for his wife so
as to relieve her of any possible worries about
finance.
15Comprehension questions (2)
- 2. why is the phrase dearly beloved repeated
when referring to his children in Paragraph 9? - Key The phrase delay beloved is repeated to
create a sarcastic effect for his relationship
with his children was far from being close and
intimate and he devoted too little to his
children.
16Comprehension questions (3)
- 3. What do you think is the relationship like
between Phil and the three children? - Key Refer to Paragraphs 912. Successful as his
was as a corporate man, Phil was a failing
father. Is eldest son knew so little about him
that he had to research his father by asking the
neighbors what he was like. His daughter had
nothing to say when staying along with him. And
his younger son, also his favorite, remarked
bitterly that his father and he only boarded at
the home. The relationship between Phil and his
children was distant and estranged.
17Comprehension questions (4)
- 4.what is the implication of the ending?
- Key It implies the story of Phil sees no end He
will soon be replaced by an equally hardworking
guy who may following in his steps and repeat the
same tragedy. Bosses are always on the lookout
for workaholics and they are never in short
supply. The ending is full of sarcasm and
bitterness.
18Comprehension questions (5)
- 5. Do you think it is a sheer waste of life to
die so young for working so hard? How can you
learn from the story of Phil?
19Vocabulary
- 1. obituary 1) C a published notice of death,
sometimes with a brief account of the dead
persons life. - 2) adj. an obituary notice
20??
- ???????????????????????????????????????,???????,?2
005?11?7?22?20?????,????,??20?? - ??????????2005?11?12???10????????1???????
- ????????????????
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- 2005?11?9?
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- ????(0755)83350816-2218213428797579
21Funeral notice
- CANSON, Joyce ReaSept 5, 1941-Oct 12, 2006.
Mother of Robert Beverly, Richard Beverly, and
Sheila Daniels. Mother-in-law to Sheryl Beverly,
Kim Beverly, and Darius Daniels. Beloved
''Granny'' to Robert, Anjalee, Sheila, Clarissa,
Raven, and Kathryn. Sister to Charlotte Smith,
Gloria Johnson (husband Ronald), and the late
Jimmy Thorntona (late wife Polly). Daughter to
the late Charles Canson and Emma Johnson.
Survived by many cousins, nieces, nephews, and
good friends. Friends and family are invited to
attend a celebration of Joyces life, Tuesday,
October 17, 2006 at 12 pm at Sierra 2 Center,
2791 24th Street, Sacramento, CA 95818.
22- 2. coronary thrombosis blocking of a coronary
artery by a clot of blood, damaging the heart and
possibly causing death heart attack. - 3. workaholic C a person who works obsessively
and finds it difficult to stop. - -holic suffix. means be addicted to
- E.g. alcoholic
- U workaholism
23- 4. conceivably adv. in a manner that can be
imagined or believed. - E.g. He might conceivably have missed the bus.
- conceivable adj.
- E.g.?????????????????
- It is hardly conceivable that he can run so fast.
- ?????????
- She earned money by every conceivable means
24- conceive
- 1) We didn't conceive such a tragedy could occur.
- To be of the opinion that think
- 2) We have to conceive a plan to increase
profits. - To form or develop in the mind devise
- 3) I couldn't conceive the meaning of that
sentence, although he explained again. - To apprehend mentally understand
- 4)The baby was conceived in February and born in
November. - To become pregnant with (offspring).
25- 5. executive 1) C a person or group having
administrative or managerial authority in an
organization. - 2) adj. Of, relating to, capable of, or suited
for carrying out or executing - E.g.He was a man of great executive ability.
- Vt. execute
- 1) A government executes the decisions of the
ruling party. - To put into effect carry out
- 2) The victims relatives expected to execute the
killer. - To put to death, especially by carrying out a
lawful sentence.
26- 6. survive vt. To live longer than to outlive.
- E.g. My father survived my mother by/for five
years - 7. board vi. to pay to( or to make somebody)
sleep and eat meals in somebodys house. - E.g. She arranged to board some students from the
university. - 2) Food or meals considered as a whole
- E.g. Each student has to pay 100 a month for
board and lodging.
27- 8. widow C a woman whose husband has died, and
who has not married again. - widower a man whose wife has died, and who has
not married again - widow vt. to make a widow or widower of sb.
- 9. deceased C somebody who has died,
especially - Adj. dead.
- Vi/ U decease
- E.g. Upon your decease the house will pass to
your wife.
28- 10.lineupcA group of people, organizations, or
things enlisted or arrayed for a purpose - E.g. a candidate has an impressive lineup of
supporters. - a line of people who has died, especially
recently.
29Language points of Text I (1-1)
- 1.work himself to death died from
self-motivated overwork. - 2. finally imply the doomed ending of the
workaholic. - 3. precisely exactly
- E.g.They arrived at five oclock precisely.
- Note Some of its synonyms are exactly,
accurately, definitely - Emphasize his devotion to work.
30Language points of Text I (1-2)
- 4. Why isnt the name mentioned?
- 1) get the readers involved in finding out the
character. - 2) suggest the fact that workaholism has become a
common/ubiquitous phenomenon. workaholics lost
their individuality while they are busy in the
wok.
31Language points of Text I (1-3)
- 5. juxtapositions putting contradictory actions
or ideas together. - E.g. work to death on Sunday morning, which
creates am image of a workaholic.
32Language points of Text I (2-1)
- 1. What type of man was the deceased?
- 2. Were Phils friends all greatly saddened by
his sudden death?
33Language points of Text I (4-1)
- 2. overweight weighing more than is normal,
necessary, or allowed, especially having more
body weight than is considered normal or healthy
for ones age or build. - Compare fat, obese, fleshy, stout, pudgy, plump,
chubby - These adjectives mean having an abundance and
often an excess of flesh. - Fat implies excessive weight and is generally
unfavorable in its connotations - e.g. Charlie is not merely overweight but
downright fat.
34Language points of Text I (4-2)
- obsess implies gross overweight
- e.g. a woman of robust frame though stout,
not obsess - fleshy suggests a not necessarily excessive
abundance of flesh - e.g. Susan quite likes her boyfriends firm,
fleshy arms. - Stout is sometimes used as a polite term to
describe fatness. In stricter application stout
refers to a person with a thickset, bulky figure - e.g. Even slim girls can become stout matrons.
35Language points of Text I (4-3)
- Pudgy means short and fat
- e.g. His pudgy fingers look really funny.
- Plump applies to a pleasing fullness of figure
- e.g. Everybody loves Rita, the plump, rosy
little girl. - A chubby person is round and plump
- e.g. a chubby toddler chubby checks
36Language points of Text I (5)
- 3.survive to live longer than to outlive
- e.g. Its amazing that she should have survived
all her children and grandchildren. - My father survived my mother by four years.
- 4.marketable wanted by purchasers or employers.
- e.g. They have failed to launch a marketable
model for years. - It is a good idea to list your marketable skills
before heading for the job fair.
37Language points of Text I (6)
- 5. widow a woman whose husband has died, and who
has not married again. - widower a man whose wife has died, and who has
not married again. - Widow v. to make a widow or widower of somebody.
- e.g. She calls her windowed father/mother nearly
everyday.
38Language points of Text I (7)
- 6.straighten out to solve or settle to remove
difficulties from something or the doubt or
ignorance in somebodys mind. - e.g. we need someone capable of straightening out
all the confusion. - I was then muddled about the registration
procedures. Luckily, she came in time to
straighten me out.
39Language points of Text I (8)
- 7. inquiry a request for help or information an
investigation - e.g. There have been many inquires about the new
degree program we offer. - Dont hesitate to check with our workers at the
inquiry desk/office when in doubt.
40Language points of Text I (14)
- 1. a heart-attack natural a person suited by
nature for heart-attack. - 2. pick out select
41Language points of Text I (15)
- Why the author repeat the sentence three times?
- The author relates the two contradictory
ideaswork to death on Sunday morning. - Thus reveals Phils personality and suggests that
he is destined to be exhausted.
42Language points of Text I (16-1)
- 1. discreetly self-restraint in speech.
- 2. taste faculty of discerning what is excellent
and appropriate. - 3. replacement substitute.
- It is contradictory to the Paragraph 13.
- It was the same quality, leading to Phils death,
that the president was seeking in the replacement.
43Language points of Text I (16-2)
- what is the implication of the ending?
- Key It reveals handwork is the deciding factor
in determining whether one will be promoted. It
is also an inner drive to hard work. - It implies the story of Phil sees no end He will
soon be replaced by an equally hardworking guy
who may follow in his steps and repeat the same
tragedy. Bosses are always on the lookout for
workaholics and they are never in short supply. - The ending is full of sarcasm and bitterness.
44Comprehension questions of Text II (1)
- 1.What is a kind of fundamental malaise which
seems very common and which poses difficult
problems for the social reformer? - People are troubled by a feeling of boredom and
discontent, so they seem to yearn for something
that may help to boost their spirits. The rich
often feel depressed and professional men often
feel hopelessly thwarted.
45Comprehension questions of Text II (2)
- 2. What is the first of the two causes that
prevent people from being as happy as one might
expect? - It is the necessity of readiness to submit to
others in some large organization. Conformity is
encouraged and submission is a virtue. If you are
bubbling with energy and laden with ideas, you
constantly find yourself in trouble. You are
bossed about by some big man at the top who is
elderly, weary and cynical. The bright people
always suffer from the impossibility of doing
anything they believe to be right.
46Comprehension questions of Text II (3)
- 3. What is the major cause that prevents people
from being happy as much as possible? - Most people act on some principles rather than on
impulse. They believe in a general theory on how
to make one happy, but the theory is basically
false. A competitive struggle dominates life in
which happiness lied in getting ahead of those
who are your neighbors, colleagues or friends.
They forget joys devoid of competitive elements.
Though it is true that you are mad if you always
yield to impulse, it is no less true that you may
dry up by soft degrees if you never yield to
impulse. If you desire to live a healthy and
happy life, you should allow impulse to have
sufficient scope to remain alive and you should
preserve a range of interests. However, if you
live merely on principle, you can hardly feel
happy.
47Comprehension questions of Text II (4)
- 4. How do you understand the statement that a
life which is all principle is a life on rails? - In such a life, one may score earthly
achievements in a fairly fast manner, but he may
succeed in attaining his particular goal at the
cost freedom, which is an indispensable element
in happiness.
48Oral activities
- Organize yourselves into groups of three to five
and discuss the following issue -
- How can Phil avoid his tragedy
49Exercises
- 1. Word transformation P60
- 2. Paraphrase P61
- 3. Present perfect or present perfect progressive
tense P61-62 - 4. translation P48
- 5. Writing practice
50Exercises (1)
- Translation exercises
- 1. ???????????????,????????10??????(workaholic)
- My immediate boss is typical workaholic, for he
works for over ten hours each day all the year
round. - 2. ??????????????,??????????????????????(extracurr
icular) - The principal attaches much importance to
extracurricular activities and he believes that
they will help to cultivate students tremendous
interest in the external world.
51Exercises (1)
- 3. ?????,????????,???????,???????????(grab)
- He always grabs a shower, a sandwich and then a
taxi to go to work every Monday morning. - 4. ?????????,???????????(straighten out)
- Since you are leaving the company, you should
straighten out the accounts within the week. - 5. ????????????,??????(stay up)
- He often stays up late at night in order to
finish writing his Ph. D. dissertation on time.
52Exercises (1)
- 6. ????????????????????(replace)
- He is considered a natural for the post of the
president, for he has been an excellent
vice-president for almost ten years. - 7. ??????????????,????????10????????(natural)
- He is considered a natural for the post of the
president, for he has been an excellent
vice-president for almost ten years. - 8. ???????,????????????(pick out)
- He is just too common to be picked out from the
crowd.
53Exercises (2)
- Fill in the blank in each sentence with a word
taken from the box in the proper form. -
board discreetly precisely classic executive s
urvive conceivably grab widow deceased obituary
workaholic
54Exercises (2)
survived
- 1. The woman _________ her husband by nine years.
- 2.The plot of the novel _________ the reader.
- 3. Not wanting to draw any attention, Roy went
__________ into the lecture hall. - 4. We learned about her ________ father by
reading his ________ in The Times.
grabs
discreetly
deceased
obituary
55Exercises (2)
- 5.I do not understand how the arranged marriage
could ___________ work out in the more
traditional societies. - 6. The old couple plans to __________ some
students from the university . - 7. The new business writing course is oriented
towards _________ and managers who wasnt the
individual attention and focused training that
will help them write with impact and
effectiveness. - 8. Upper-intermediate English learners are often
encouraged to read the _________ of the English
and American literature.
conceivably
board
executives
classics
56Writing practice (1)
- Write a composition of at least 200 words on the
following topic. - Career or Family which is more important?
57Sample writing
- Career or Family which is more important?
- Sample
- When asked about their opinion of career and
family, people always respond differently. Some
people deem it more important to pursue their
career, while there are always other people who
argue that family should be the number one in
ones life.
58- It goes without any question that career plays a
key role in our life. In the very first place,
career can give us an aim to live on. Without
career, much of our living time will be certainly
wasted. Whats more, career can provide us with a
means to live on. Most of the people earn their
income from a job. On the other hand, family is
also an indispensable part of life, as many
people will admit. Family is always regarded as a
place where we can escape from troubles in life.
In addition, we can obtain a sense of belonging
to from family. Without it, anyone will feel
lonely and desperate.
59- In my opinion, career and family are not in
opposition to each other. Rather, they can
enhance each other so that ones life can become
better and better. Therefore, its not a choice
between right and wrong, but one between ideal
and practical.