Ký ức thời sinh viên

Ký ức thời sinh viên

Thứ Bảy, 6 tháng 4, 2013

What is culture and what are the influences of culture?


What is culture and what are the influences of culture?
TRỊNH XUÂN THỦY - CT38B - HỌC VIỆN NGOẠI GIAO



                 A culture is the way of life of some society, including its artifacts, beliefs, accumulated knowledge, and the system of values in which its members live. Also the arts, family life, child rearing, custom of marriage and courtship, education, occupations, government – in short, the total effective legacy of the society which is potentially available to its members.


                The culture concept has the advantage of enabling us to look at the whole society, making clear the fact that one cannot understand group behavior except as part of the culture pattern.


                To understand a people, then we must look at their physical environment (geography, climate, natural resources, food supply, power resources and industrialization), the human influences (parents, siblings, friends, neighbors, colleagues, teachers, police and other officials), their institution (families, schools, churches, peer groups, government, occupations), their artistic expressions, their ideology (as expressed in national or local rituals, constitutions, religions, group loyalties, ancestor-worship) and the manner in which they go about achieving the three basic needs: self preservation, self-reproduction and self-expression.


                 International exchange has become so quick and easy nowadays that we are able to have more contact with other cultures than ever before.


                This crossing of cultures is stimulating and enriching. In fact, it is by such cross-breeding that civilization has advanced. Greece was fertilized by what it learned from the ancient empires of the East. Rome was brought out of barbarism by its contact with Greek culture. Northern Europe raised its civilization upon the contact with Roman culture. After the dark Middle Ages, contacts with Islam and the rediscovery of the classics brought on a new flowering throughout Europe.


                Although the crossing of cultures is enriching, it also has its dangers. The different cultures can lead to confused signals, as when an Indian shakes his head, he means “Yes”, but it is understood “No” by foreigners; or when the Japanese answers a negative question, “Didn’t you go?” with “Yes” meaning “No”. These confused signals become more serious when they involve what we regard as discourtesies or deceptions.


               The German’s respect for authorities and officials produces a kind of politeness or deference which is discomforting to Americans who try to treat everyone with equal casualness and to pretend that no rank exists. It even seems insincere, and therefore irritating.


              The crossing of different cultures can lead to misunderstandings and may cause conflicts. Therefore they are divided into cultural groups by their differences. And we should study such groups so that when we go to distant places, we can understand the others and can live with them more friendlily and peacefully.



Nguồn: language123.blogspot.com 

Describe a village you know well



Describe a village you know well
TRỊNH XUÂN THỦY - CT38B - HỌC VIỆN NGOẠI GIAO



                       I was born and have grown up in the country in a small village beside a beautiful river. My village is surrounded in a hedge of green bamboos. Most of the houses in the village are built of brick and have red tiled roofs.
In the middle of the village there is an old pagoda with high trees around it. On the first and fifteenth days of the lunar month, the villagers often go to the pagoda to give offerings to The God of Agriculture.
                         On the right of the village flows quietly a clear and blue river. When I was young, I used to swim in the river with my friends. How can I forget the wonderful time on this river fishing or rowing a boat with my boyhood friends!
On the left of the village lies the village green where village meetings are often held by village officials. On this ground covered with soft grass we used to fly kites on windy autumnal evenings.
                         The majority of villages live on agriculture. They get rich thanks to their fertile rice-fields and their diligence. Harvest time is certainly the busiest and the merriest time of the year. During the harvest, the villagers often get up very early in the morning. They cheerfully go to their rice-fields to harvest the bumper crop – the fruit of many months of hard work.
                         My villagers are very friendly and helpful. They are willing to offer mutual help in any case and always get on with one another harmoniously.
                         My village is rather small indeed but I like it very much because I was born and have grown up there and spent my happiest childhood among the simple and hard-working villagers who always feel attached to their native land.
                        

Nguồn: language123.blogspot.com