English 1006
Prompt #13
26 September 2013
Another step along the road
Application
One way -- maybe the best way -- to know whether you've actually
understood a new concept or strategy is to attempt apply it in a
new situation. Let's try this. You'll probably remember that the
second- and third-place stories in our poll about which articles
we thought worth discussing were these:
Read (or reread) both articles. Then go back through them and look
for a sentence that you could ask the rest of us a question about
that would identify the same sorts of issues that my questions on
the courtroom veil article focused on. In other words, find a
sentence that you think you can see a way to rephrase which would
convey (and expect in the reader) a different value than the one the
writer of the article intended, without actually changing the
meaning. The questions I used, you may remember, were these:
- The article says, "The judge's ruling means that if the woman,
who started wearing a veil in May 2012, refuses to comply during
her trial she could be jailed for contempt of court." Do you
think it would make any difference to your reading of the
article if it left out that relative clause, "who started
wearing a veil in May 2012," so that it would read this way:
"The judge's ruling means that if the woman refuses to comply
during her trial she could be jailed for contempt of court."
Does the clause evoke a reaction from you? What? Do you think it
suggests something about what the writer of the article might
believe? What?
- One paragraph of the article says, "The woman's defence
barrister Susan Meek had argued the woman's human right to
express her faith through her attire would be breached if she
was ordered to remove her veil." Does the phrase "express her
faith through her attire" invite you to a reaction? Can you
think of a different way to say the same thing that might evoke
a different response -- in you or in other people? Do you think
the defence barrister intended you to have the reaction you
have, and do you think she might have used a different phrase if
she were not making an argument in court?
- One paragraph of the article says, "Keith Porteous Wood,
executive director of the National Secular Society, said he
believed it was 'vital' defendants' faces were visible at 'all
times' and said he 'regretted' the judge's decision." No
circumstance in which this was said is offered; we must guess
whether the writer specifically went and asked Wood for a
comment, or if Wood found some other occasion to say this. Do
you have a reaction to the choice to include this quote in the
story? Do you think the writer of the story anticipated your
reaction? And do you have any thoughts about the "National
Secular Society" (without, of course, actually knowing anything
about it)?
Write out your question, including the sentence, as above, and post
it in either of the forums that will be available by Friday morning
on the course Moodle site. Do this by Sunday night.
After Monday morning, and before noon on Tuesday, answer any two of
the questions (to either article) by replying to the forum posting.
Try to pick questions which you think most interesting and important
to answer, as we try to understand how the language in the article
works to show us the writer's values and to invite us to form, or
change, our own.
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