薛海燕
Step 1 感知·阅读导航
[话题导入]
这是一篇人物传记(biographical essay),介绍了澳大利亚女权主义者和政治活动家Zelda DAprano的生平。她不顾自己可能面临的后果和别人的眼光,通过自己的各种努力来为女性争取权益。她在第一份工作的工厂中亲眼见证了女性所遭遇的不公对待,此后成为女权主义者,甚至用链条把自己锁在市联邦大厦门口以呼吁同工同酬,因此遭到她所就职的澳大利亚肉类行业职工工会解雇。尽管她因争取女性权益一再遭到解雇,但她坚定的女权主义者形象影响了许多人,她还参与创建了女性行动委员会、女性解放中心等机构,这在很大程度上改变了澳大利亚的女权主义组织不足的局面,影响了包括作者在内的广大女性。Zelda DAprano在晚年还不遗余力地帮助、培养年轻一代的女权主义者。她坚强乐观、不屈不挠的精神遗产将不断鼓舞后来者去完成她未竟的事业。
本文语言平实却感人,从作者真挚的感情中我们可窥见主人公的巨大社会影响力。全文603词,建议用时10分钟。
[阅读目标]
1.了解Zelda DAprano的生平事迹以及她对作者和社会产生的巨大影响,并分析其性格特点;
2.了解文章框架结构,掌握人物传记的一般写作方式;
3.体会文章夹叙夹议的语言风格。
Zelda DAprano was an unstoppable force1. Its through my work as a director of the Victorian Womens Trust that I got to know her, and she has been a personal hero of mine ever since. I feel lucky for every conversation we had together.
As a staunch2 feminist, labour unionist, and pay justice advocate, Zelda had an everlasting impact on the womens movements and labour movements within Australia. She also spent the time in her later years helping and nurturing young feminists. I, and many others, are beneficiaries3 of that kindness, and we find ourselves grieving4 an immense(巨大的) loss.
She left school at 14 to join the workforce, and it was in this factory work that she began to witness first⁃hand the inequality between male and female workers. Every time she took a job, she would point out the injustice of this disparity5 to her employers and would be swiftly dismissed. She didnt care about personal consequences; she cared about fairness.
The legislation Zelda fought for has been all but eroded(逐漸消失). The Equal Pay Act of 1972 has been aggressively watered down to become the “Fair Work Act” and no longer even mentions “pay equality”, “gender discrimination” or “equal pay”. We allowed ourselves to be the frogs in the hot water. Zelda noticed, and Im heartbroken she couldnt stay long enough to see us fix it. But fix it we will.
When Zelda was chained to the doors of parliament(国会), a police officer began to criticize her. “Arent you embarrassed? Its just you on your own,” he said. Without hesitation, she replied,“No. Because soon there will be three, then there will be five, and then there will be...” She was right. Ten days after her protest(抗议), Alva Geikie and Thelma Solomon joined her. From that action, the three women founded the Womens Action Committee and the Womens Liberation Centre, from which the Womens Liberation Movement in Melbourne was born. This changed the landscape of feminist organizing in Australia forever.
In her 1995 biography, Zelda described
wanting to get more women involved in activism, because “we had passed the stage of caring about a ‘lady?like image; because
women had been polite for too long...and were still being ignored”. She didnt care about what people thought of her; she cared about fairness.
The Womens Action Committee organized the very first pro⁃choice rally(公众集会) in 1975, with an impressive turnout of over 500 women. It was reported by the media as “a horde of angry barefoot women” taking to the streets. Zelda assured me they were definitely wearing shoes. She really did walk the walk6, throughout her entire life.
In 2015, the Victorian Trades Hall Council introduced the Zelda DAprano Award for union activism. In a bittersweet7 coinci⁃
dence, the nominations(提名) for the 2018 award opened on the very day she passed away. The flag at Trades Hall was lowered to half mast in her honor.
The legacy of Zelda DAprano cannot be contained within memorial writings, and it cannot die. It lives within the hearts of feminists—young and old—who, inspired by her spirit, will continue to fight for equality and fairness. It lives in the fire in our bellies. It lives in the smirk8 we wear when we are doubted. Even through the heartache of loss, it lives.
海词积累
1.an unstoppable force 难以阻挡的力量
e.g.If you put those two things together, you have an almost unstoppable force.
2.staunch adj. 坚定的;忠实的
e.g.Hes a staunch supporter of controls on government spending.
3.beneficiary n. 受益者
e.g.I am the beneficiary of your generosity.
4.grieve v. 悲痛
e.g.Hes grieving over his dead wife and son.
5.disparity n. (尤指因不公正对待引起的)不同;差异
e.g.The wide disparity between rich and poor still exists.
6.walk the walk 言出必行;说到做到
e.g.A good boss should walk the walk.
7.bittersweet adj. 苦乐参半的
e.g.Bittersweet memories of childhood flooded back.
8.smirk n. 得意的笑;傻笑
e.g.He had a self⁃satisfied smirk on his face.
Step 2 实践·文本解读
目标呈现
Ⅰ.Understand the structure.
【点石成金】人物传记写作要求逻辑结构清晰:开篇简要介绍人物身份及成就(影响),正文部分通过人物经历体现人物品质,结尾简要评价人物的影响。
Ⅱ.Analyze the qualities.
What qualities does Zelda DAprano possess? Find the proof.
Step 3 运用·读写整合
Ⅰ.The opening paragraph
Why does the author share her feelings and attitude towards Zelda in the opening paragraph?
【点石成金】设置悬念可在引入主题时吸引读者。
Ⅱ.The body
1.Find out the comments in the body part.
【点石成金】在叙述中融入评论可使文章见解更深刻。
2.How do you understand the sentence “She really did walk the walk, throughout her entire life”?
Ⅲ.The concluding paragraph
The legacy of Zelda DAprano cannot be contained within memorial writings, and it can⁃not die. It lives within the hearts of feminists—young and old—who, inspired by her spirit, will continue to fight for equality and fairness. It lives in the fire in our bellies. It lives in the smirk we wear when we are doubted. Even through the heartache of loss, it lives.
Figures of speech:
Purpose:
Step 4 提升·素養建构
Ⅰ.Writing techniques
How to write a good biographical essay?
·Use a hook to attract readers and introduce the topic in the opening paragraph.
·Give a general introduction.
·Use personal experiences or major events to show qualities.
·Combine narration with comments to make the essay more insightful.
·Apply some figures of speech to make a powerful ending.
Ⅱ.Imitative writing
Write a biographical essay of a Chinese celebrity in the following structure.
【点石成金】仿写活动是人物传记类文本阅读课的有效拓展方式之一。学生在阅读已给文本的过程中了解人物事迹及其优秀品质,同时学习文本框架结构,体会文本的语言特点和写作技巧。写感兴趣的人物的传记能激发学生兴趣,使学生将已学技能运用到写作过程中,并在写作过程中进一步体会所写人物的优秀品质。