Your teacher of English has asked you to discuss a question on ‘The Caucasian Chalk Circle’. Three minutes into the discussion, most of the students...

      

Your teacher of English has asked you to discuss a question on ‘The Caucasian Chalk Circle’. Three minutes into the discussion, most of the students lose concentration .Give the possible reasons why this happened.

  

Answers


Martin
-One person dominated the discussion
-Abrupt and rude interruptions
-Inaudibility
-The students had not prepared adequately

marto answered the question on August 6, 2019 at 07:35


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    b) Describe the first meeting between Paulina and Ahoya.

    c) Explain the meaning of the following words as used in the extract.

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    d) What does Paulina think of Martin after the events so far recorded in the novel?


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    Western media. Most of the time Africa is ignored but when it does make it into the newspapers,
    radio or TV, then it is always portrayed as sinking in corruption, wars, famine and disease. If
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    have been entirely depopulated by now.
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    while all African leader are seen as being irredeemably corrupt.
    The point being put across is that Africa is guilty unless proven innocent. Western journalists
    assigned to cover Africa are in most cases the most junior and the least experienced in the
    organization. They are given this version of a ‘Hopeless Continent’ for so long that when they
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    journalists set out to find corruption, decay and mismanagement. And if they cannot find it, they
    will invent it on the basis that “ it must be there somewhere”
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    Western journalists, they deny that their view of Africa is prejudiced. They are probably telling
    the truth because they report what they see- but they see what they want to see. And what they
    want to see, subconsciously is a version of backward, primitive and uncivilized Africa.

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    only way this can change is if the programming is changed. But how do you go about doing so?
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    then the Western media will see Africa as we do –a glorious continent full of promise but going
    through a rough time at present.
    (Adapted from African Business, May 2004)

    a) What is the likelihood of finding a positive story on Africa?

    b) Why are Bosnia and Serbia mentioned?

    c) Why is the word “experts” on the third paragraph put within quotation marks?


    d) Rewrite the following sentence to begin: Had….
    'If all the predictions made about the impact of Aids had been correct, most African
    countries would have been entirely depopulated by now.'

    e) According to the passage is Africa more corrupt that America? Explain your answer.

    f) Give two reasons why African stories are mainly assigned to the most junior and
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    Sorry
    Irredeemably

    Date posted: June 27, 2019.  Answers (1)

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    In the days after the bomb went off the air was full of whispers. Paulina knew the
    sense of them although they were often enough phrased in difficult English purposely
    order to exclude her. But she could not be excluded. Had she not lost a child? They said
    that Kariuki had gone to Zambia, had registered in a hotel there. But the elder Mrs.
    Kariuki was an acquaintance of the house and she did not know of it, her co-wife also did
    not know. There had been no preparations for going: there had been no custom of
    keeping unnecessary secrets. It was small husbands with small concerns who did that.
    Whisper, whisper, whisper. They said the police officers had been transferred
    from here to there. That officers had been consulting with the missing man here and
    there. That there was a lot of money. That parliament- whisper, whisper, whisper.
    Paulina went about her duties, ironing, setting tables, supervising the servant in
    the cleaning of the house and the hard washing. Sometimes her belly throbbed with the
    child who had been so casually taken from her at another time like this and the others
    who had been denied her. And yet a child was a child with a light hold on life. When it
    came to a man, a wealthy man, golden tongued, greatly loved, though he was not of her
    own people she knew this much, that the passing of such a man would be remembered,
    celebrate. Still not a week passed without someone speaking of Tom.
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    was that for weeks you had been expecting, although the real event was still not known.
    The police officers went about their leave or their business outside the station without
    referring to it, the mortuary keeper who had a well-dressed corpse of appropriate size and
    weight and characteristics in his charge did not tumble to it. The airline clerks checking
    flights to Zambia did not tumble to it, the children playing in the streets did not tumble to
    it -children who were of the age to have been shot in Kano or patel flats, children who did
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    of the forest of the KEM prohibited signs. Children of the New Method, who knew John
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    Catch a little baby so,
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    Eeny, meeny, miny mo.”
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    Nobody really knew how it tied up with the bomb. There was no need to know,
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    casualties of the bomb were nameless people absorbed into the daily casualty lists of fire,
    flood and domestic quarrels, J.M burst upon the scene as a martyr and a paroxysm of
    grief ran through the city. The skies were leaden that April and it grew colder and colder.
    Eyes grew hard in Nairobi and conversations were rounded off with polite, empty
    phrases, even before the stranger came close. Photographs of J.M alternated with the
    Pope and the Sacred Heart on the roadside framing stands. The book was reprinted and
    within a few months parliamentary speeches were printed too. A kikuyu gramophone
    record was banned Mr. Mwangale remarked bluntly in parliament, “This is time we
    cannot be told Njenga did it. “Paulina and Martin did not discuss it. The employers spoke
    of it in low tones. In May the rains came, chill and steady, a bit late, and in the shanties
    by the river people squirmed and shivered over the water-logged ground and fires
    smoked damply at the amount of airless polythene shelter

    a) Which bomb is referred to in this extract?

    b) Explain why the author repeats the word “whisper”?

    c) “…..the child who had been so casually taken from her at another time like.”
    What incident in the novel does this relate to?

    d) Write notes on the aspects of the politics contained in this extract.

    e) Mr. Mwangale remarked bluntly in parliament,
    “…this time we cannot be told Njenga did it”.
    Rewrite as reported speech.

    f) In about 80 words, summerize the cover-up

    g) Identify and explain one use of sarcasm in this extract.

    h) What shows that J.M became even more popular after he died?

    Date posted: June 27, 2019.  Answers (1)