英美概况内容及翻译
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《英美概况》教学大纲课程名称:英美概况课程代码:04213020课程类别:公共基础课课程性质:必修总学时:64 理论学时:64先修课程:《综合英语》适用专业:应用英语、商务英语开课单位:经管学院一、课程性质、目的课程性质:《英语国家概况》是英语专业的一门知识性基础课。
本课程以英语为媒介,比较系统地向学生阐述世界主要英语国家的社会与文化背景,如地理、历史、政治、经济、社会生活和文化传统等方面的基本知识。
它是英语专业学生学习英语专业其它语言基础课和在高年级阶段学习英语文学和翻译等课程的基础。
课程目的:本课程的教学目的是提高学生在跨文化语言运用过程中对文化差异的敏感性、宽容性和处理文化差异的灵活性,从而改善学生的跨文化语言运用能力。
二、课程内容和学时分配第一章大不列颠与北爱尔兰简介【教学基本要求】对英国的社会及文化背景作全面概括,使学生了解英国社会和文化的过去和现在的情况。
【教学时数】 6【教学重点和难点】重点:英国社会背景文化知识介绍。
难点:英国的民族与宗教及政治体制。
【教学内容】英格兰、苏格兰、威尔士的地理、语言发展和民族特点,以及北爱尔兰地理、宗教信仰及民族独立问题。
第二章英国政府与当代政治、经济【教学基本要求】使学生认识英国的政府统治体制和议会程序及选举制度,同时了解英国当代的政治经济情况。
【教学时数】 6【教学重点和难点】重点:英国政府体制的特色;民族等级制度对人民生活的影响;英国经济发展的原因。
难点:英国政府议会选举程序。
【教学内容】1、英国君主立宪制度议会制度及内阁2、英国选举制度、政党制及政治发展趋势3、英国经济概况、农业及飞机工业的发展第三章英国的对外关系【教学基本要求】通过课文讲解使学生认识英国的发展历史、外交政策及英美两国的关系。
【教学时数】6【教学重点和难点】重点:英帝国的扩张历史;难点:对外政策的基础和对外关系发展。
【教学内容】1、大英帝国的扩张历史及现状、英国对外政策的基础和立足点2、英国与北约、欧盟等一些国际组织的关系3、英美两个资本主义大国之间的关系第四章英国社会文化与生活【教学基本要求】通过教学,让学生了解英国的教育体制和社会各阶层的生活情况。
专业课程科目名称法语翻译计算机室内设计designintérieurinformatique外国美术史histoireartistiquedespaysétrangers商业环境设计designdansl’environnementcommercial公共建筑室内设计designintérieurdel’édificationpublique 社会实践 pratiquessociales中国传统室内设计designintérieurtraditionnelchino is命题设计designdeterminé外出考察 investigationsortie园林设计 designjardinier毕业论文thèse/mémoiredefind’études绘画透视Scénographiedudessin书法 Calligraphie图案 Motif计算机 Informatique美术概论Traitédesbeaux-arts自描 Auto-portrait构成 Composition油画风景Paysagesdepeintureàl’huile创作Techniquedecréation油画材料Matérieldepeintureàl’huile油画静物naturemortedanslapeintureàl’huile油画肖像Portraitdanslapeintureàl’huile山水 Peinturedepaysage工笔花鸟 Peinturechinoisedefactureminutieuseetpeinturedefleursetoiseaux 材料技法Technologiedematériels中国美术史Histoiredesbeaux-artschinois外国美术史Histoiredesbeaux-artsétranger丝网印刷 Impressiondefiletetdefil书籍装帧Présentationdeslivres美术教育 Educationdesbeaux-arts招贴设计Designd’affiche电脑美术 Beaux-artsinformatique教育学论文Thèsesdesciencedel’éducation心理学论文Thèsesdepsychologie转贴于:小语种考试_考试大平面设计平面构成 structurationplane色彩设计计划 projetdedesigndecouleur立体构成structurationstéréoscopique 装饰图案鉴赏appréciationdedessindécoratif 图形想象与思维imaginationetpenséefigu ratives 基础摄影 photographiefondamentale计算机辅助 assistanceinformatique人机工程学érgonomie机械制图dessinmécanique机构形象设计 Designdeportraitadministratif 印刷工艺technologieimprimée创意招贴affichecréative包装设计designd’emb allage建筑装饰画法几何géométriededessin阴影透视scénographiedel’ombre建筑制图 dessindeconstruction大学基础英语 anglaisfondamataluniversitaire 计算机基础basesdel’inforamatique素描 dessin色彩 coloris政治经济学scienceséconomiquesetpoliti ques哲学 pholosophie建筑绘图 dessinantconstructeur三大构成 troisgrandescompositions建筑装饰材料matériauxdedécorationconstructrice建筑装饰施工travauxdedécorationconstructrice建筑装饰设备équipementdedécorationconstructrice建筑装饰概预算estimationbudgétairededécorationconstructrice 中国建筑史 histoiredelaconstructionchinoise建筑概论introductionàlaconstruction建筑规划 planificationconstructrice室内外装饰décorationintérieureetextérieure应用文写作 compositionpratique毕业设计projetdefind’études毕业设计答辩réponseduprojetdefind’études英语专业英语泛读Lecturegénéraleenanglais英语会话 Conversationenanglais英语语音Phonétiqueanglaise综合英语Anglaissynthétique英语口语 Anglaisoral英语听说 Anglaisaudio-visuel基础视听 Anglaisaudio-visuel(élémentaire)旅游英语 Anglaistouristique英美概况Connaissancesgénéralesdel’AngleterreetdesEtats-Unis英语语法 Grammaireanglaise英语写作Techniqued’écritureenanglais英语阅读 Lectureenanglais外贸英语Anglaisducommerceextérieur高级视听 Anglaisaudio-visuel(avancé)高级英语Anglaisavancé简明英语语言学Brèvedelalin guistiqueanglaise外报外刊Journauxetrevusétrangers英国文学作品选 Oeuvreschoisiesanglo-saxonnes世界政治经济与国际关系Economieetpolitiquemondialesetrelationsinternationales英语报刊选读 LecturechoisiedesjournauxanglaisWTO概论IntroductionàWTO第二外语Deuxièmelangueétrangère高级英语写作Techniqued’écritureenanglais(avancé)教育实习Stagedel’enseignement英译汉 Version(外文译成本国文)汉译英Thème(本国文译成外文)英美文学作品选读 Oeuvreschoisiesanglo-américaines英美教学理论Théoriepédagogiqueanglo-américaine英语口译Interprétationenanglais圣经与罗马神话Bibleetlégendesromaines英美影视欣赏Appréciationdesoeuvrescénimatographiquesettélévisuelle sanglo-américaines英语词汇学 Lexicologieanglaise写作基础Techniquesélémentairesd’écriture enanglais英语写作与修辞Ecritureetrhétoriqueenanglais英语短篇小说阅读 Lecturedesnouvellesenanglais英国文化 Cultureanglo-saxonne生命科学导论Introductionàlasciencedelavie海洋生物学 Biologiemaritime公关礼仪 Protocolespubliques文学阅读导论Introductionàlalecturelittéraire阅读与欣赏Lectureetappréciation高级商务英语Anglaisavancéducommerce英语八级考试辅导Coursréparatoiresàl’examend’anglaisdedegré8欧洲文学史Histoirelittéraireeuropéenne快速阅读 Lecturerapide英语应用文写作 Ecrtiturepratiqueenanglais广告英语 Anglaispublicitaire英语专业八级Degré8del’anglaisspecialize。
《英美概况》选修课课程论文选题及要求一、要求1. 课程论文内容应与所学内容密切相关,涉及英美两国历史、政治、教育、文化、语言等方面的有关内容及以上方面的中英对比等。
严禁抄袭,如发现,一律按作弊论处。
2. 英语写作,800-1000字,包括论文题目,摘要,关键词及参考文献在内3. 英文摘要80字左右,关键词3-5个。
4. 参考文献资料3篇及以上。
5. 参考文献:引用国外作者的文章按作者姓名英文字母先后排序,引用国内作者的文章按拼音顺序。
包括文献编号、作者姓名、书名、或文集名、期刊名、出版单位、出版年月、页码等。
论文用A4纸单面打印,装订(页面设置为:左2.8,右2.5,上2.5,下2.5,行距固定值18磅)。
6. 页码从正文第一页开始按阿拉伯数字连续编排,位于页面底端居中。
二、上交时间13-14周三、封面及正文格式说明青岛农业大学全校选修课(宋体二号)英美概况课程论文(宋体一号加粗)论文题目(宋体3号)学生专业班级英语2007级3班学生姓名(学号)XXX ********二O一三年五月XX 日论文格式要求题目字居中On Wordsworth and Emerson’s Conception of Nature(加粗Times New Roman小三空一行)Yu Lianjun(Times New Roman加粗四号)Class 2, 2007, Foreign Languages School(加粗Times New Roman小四号空一行)Abstract:(加粗Times New Roman小四号)The mid-20th century has brought with it many significant changes and progresses in the study of language.(Times New Roman 小四号)Key words(加粗Times New Roman小四号):Changes; Progresses; Study;Language (Times New Roman小四号空一行)华兹华斯和爱默生对大自然的不同理解(宋体四号空一行)摘要(加粗宋体小四号):本文旨在通过对华兹华斯和爱默生诗歌的比较和分析来理解两人对于自然不同的把握。
《英语国家概况》课程教学大纲课程编号:B0715110课程名称:英语国家概况总学时:32适用对象:英语专业本科三年级学生先修课程:基础英语,英语口语,英语听力,英语语音,英语写作后续课程:英美文学一、课程性质、目标与任务1.课程类型:必修课√□选修课□公共课□专业基础课□专业课√□集中实践教学环节□2.课程性质:纯实践课□纯理论课□实践为主课□理论为主课√□理实一体化□3.课程目标及任务《英语国家概况》是介绍英语国家社会与文化入门的一门课程。
开设本课的目的在于使学生通过学习,了解英美国家的历史、地理、社会、经济、政治、教育等方面的情况及其文化传统,内容庞杂、信息量大。
培养学生正确分析有关英美等国问题的能力,并能以正确的眼光看待世界上所发生的问题,提高学生对文化差异的敏感性、宽容性和处理文化差异的灵活性,培养学生跨文化交际能力。
把学生培养成为高素质的人才,同时又能爱祖国、热爱社会主义,致力为祖国的繁荣、发达而努力的人才,培养学生树立正确世界观。
同时,通过课文的学习和各种练习的实践,达到提高英语水平的目的。
通过比较学习不同文化中具有特殊文化涵义的词语与表达式,可以促使学生掌握一些特殊词语的深层次意义,是对词汇的学习以及翻译水平的提高的有益补充;通过开展中外文化的比较,让学生切身感受到成功的交际仅有语言是远远不够的,文化方面的因素有时所起的作用远远大于语言本身,必将为英语学习者成功地参与国际商务活动,更有效地进行国际合作与交流打下坚实的文化基础。
二、课时分配三、教学组织Unit One Introduction to the UK[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 geographical features, climate2 characteristics of the UK3 history of the UK4distribution of the UK’s population[本章主要内容]:1 geographical features, climate2 characteristics of the UK3 history of the UK4distribution of the UK’s population[本章重点]:1 features of invasion of the UK2 the Great Empire, gentleman[本章难点]:Troubles in the Northern Ireland[本章思考题]:1.What is gentleman?2.The influences of the Great EmpireUnit Two The government of the UK[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 Constitutional Monarchy2 British parliament and its functions3 British government[本章主要内容]:1 Constitutional Monarchy2 British parliament and its functions3 British government[本章重点]:1 Constitutional Monarchy2 British parliament and its functions[本章难点]:Constitutional Monarchy[本章思考题]:1.How long do you think the royal family can exist?Unit Three Politics, class and race[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 understanding of the general election of the UK2 social class3 races[本章主要内容]:1 understanding of the general election of the UK2 social class3 races[本章重点]:1 the general election of the UK2 multiracial society[本章难点]:the general election of the UK[本章思考题]:1.The system of general elections and its influence in the worldUnit Four The UK economy[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 understanding the position of the UK after the WW II2. the reason of the decline3 characteristics of British agriculture and industry[本章主要内容]:1 understanding the position of the UK after the WW II2. the reason of the decline3 characteristics of British agriculture and industry[本章重点]:1 the reasons for the decline2.the trends for the British economy[本章难点]:the reasons for the decline he general election of the UK[本章思考题]:1.The privatization and reform in the economic developmentUnit Five British literature[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 the history of British literature2 writers3 schools4 divisions of literal periods[本章主要内容]:1 the history of British literature2 writers3 schools4 divisions of literal periods[本章重点]:1 the history of British literature2 well-known writers[本章难点]:divisions of literal periods[本章思考题]:1.Describe a writer/ a school/work you are most familiar with?Unit Six British education system[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 the history of education2 education systems3 higher education[本章主要内容]:1 the history of education2 education systems3 higher education[本章重点]:1 the history of education2 education systems[本章难点]:higher education[本章思考题]:1.Compare British and Chinese higher educationUnit Seven British Foreign Relations[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 UK foreign policies and their makings2 Britain and international institutions3 Britain and the United States[本章主要内容]:1 UK foreign policies and their makings2 Britain and international institutions3 Britain and the United States[本章重点]:1 UK foreign policies and their makings2 Britain and the United States[本章难点]:Britain and the United States[本章思考题]:1.The change of British image in international world from Iraqi warUnit Eight the British Media[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 British newspapers2 broadcast media3 television media[本章主要内容]:1 British newspapers2 broadcast media3 television media[本章重点]:1 British newspapers2 broadcast media[本章难点]:British newspapers[本章思考题]:1.The functions of media in cultural acquisitionUnit Nine American beginnings[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 a new land2 the settlement in Virginia3 Puritan New England4 Catholic Maryland5 Quaker Pennsylvania6 American revolution[本章主要内容]:1 a new land2 the settlement in Virginia3 Puritan New England4 Catholic Maryland5 Quaker Pennsylvania6 American revolution[本章重点]:1 A new land2 American revolution[本章难点]:American revolution[本章思考题]:1.How did modern development in Europe influence the settlement of North American colonies?Unit Ten Political system in the United States[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of :1 legislative branch2 executive branch3 Judicial branch4 political parties[本章主要内容]:1 legislative branch2 executive branch3 Judicial branch4 political parties[本章重点]:1 Checks and balance2 Political parties[本章难点]:checks and balance[本章思考题]:Compare the political systems between the UK and the USAUnit Eleven American economy[教学目标与要求]:understanding of:1.industry revolution2.free enterprise3 . American agriculture[本章主要内容]:1.industry revolution2.free enterprise3. American agriculture[本章重点]:1 free enterprise2. the roots of affluence[本章难点]:the roots of affluence[本章思考题]:The influences of American economy on the worldUnit Twelve Religion in the USA[教学目标与要求]:understanding of:1 religious liberty2. protestants in the USA3. Catholics in the USA[本章主要内容]:1 religious liberty2. protestants in the USA3. Catholics in the USA[本章重点]:1 religious liberty2 religious diversity[本章难点]:American character of religion[本章思考题]:The effects of religion on American culture and everyday lifeUnit Thirteen American literature[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 the history of American literature2 writers3 schools4 divisions of literal periods[本章主要内容]:1 the history of American literature2 writers3 schools4 divisions of literal periods[本章重点]:1 the history of American literature2 well-known writers[本章难点]:divisions of literal periods[本章思考题]:Describe a writer/ a school/work you are most familiar with?Unit Fourteen Education system in the United States[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 the history of education2 education systems3 higher education[本章主要内容]:1 the history of education2 education systems3 higher education[本章重点]:1 the history of education2 education systems[本章难点]:higher education[本章思考题]:1.Why American schools have more international students than any other countries?Unit Fifteen Social problems in the USA[教学目标与要求]:Understanding of:1 racial problems2 drug abuse3 crimes4.abuse of power by government and corporation[本章主要内容]:1 racial problems2 drug abuse3 crimes4.abuse of power by government and corporation[本章重点]:1 racial problems2 drug abuse[本章难点]:racial problems[本章思考题]:Why is it perceived as a major threat to American society?Unit Sixteen Post-WWII American foreign policy[教学目标与要求]:understanding of:1 the beginning of the cold war2 arm races3 the engagement and expansion[本章主要内容]:1 the beginning of the cold war2 arm races3 the engagement and expansion[本章重点]:1 the cold war2 the engagement and expansion[本章难点]:the cold war[本章思考题]:The current international relationships and the role America plays in it四、课程考核学生总评成绩取决于学生的出勤情况、课堂参与、学期论文、课后作业和期末考试成绩。
英美概况考前知识点总结一、英国1.概况英国,全称为大不列颠及北爱尔兰联合王国(The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland),是位于欧洲西部的一个岛屿国家,由英格兰、苏格兰、威尔士和北爱尔兰四个地区组成。
首都为伦敦,是英国最大的城市,也是英国的政治、经济和文化中心。
2. 地理英国位于欧洲大陆西北部,主要由大不列颠岛和北爱尔兰岛组成。
英国陆地面积约为24.2万平方公里,辖区范围包括英国本土以及北爱尔兰地区。
英国地势起伏,有平原、丘陵和山地,包括英格兰北部的湖区和苏格兰的高地。
英国气候多变,主要受大西洋气候影响,冬季寒冷,夏季温和多雨。
3. 政治英国是一个君主立宪制国家,国家元首为英国女王,目前由伊丽莎白二世担任。
英国议会由两院组成,包括由选举产生的下议院和由上议院成员组成的上议院。
英国政府由首相领导,议会制度是英国政治的核心。
4. 经济英国是一个发达国家,经济实力雄厚。
英国主要产业包括金融、保险、科技、汽车制造、机械制造、航空航天、医药等。
伦敦作为金融中心,对世界经济有着重要影响。
英国是欧盟成员国,但于2016年公投决定脱离欧盟。
5. 文化英国是文化底蕴深厚的国家,有着悠久的历史和传统。
英国文学、音乐、戏剧等领域拥有世界级的影响力,莎士比亚、狄更斯、爱默生等文学巨匠为世人所熟知。
英国还是摇滚乐的发源地之一,披头士乐队、皇后乐队等乐团享誉世界。
二、美国1.概况美利坚合众国(The United States of America),简称美国,是位于北美洲的一个联邦共和制国家,由50个州组成。
首都为华盛顿哥伦比亚特区,最大的城市是纽约。
美国是世界上最强大的国家之一,拥有世界上最大的经济、最强大的军事力量和最先进的科技。
2. 地理美国地处北美洲中部,东临大西洋,西临太平洋,北界加拿大,南濒墨西哥湾。
美国领土面积约为9.83万万平方公里,是世界第四大国家。
英美概况一、填空:1、The most important rivers in Scotland are Clyde and Forth.2.In 1965,big oil fields were discovered under the North Sea.3. The English people are the descendants of Anglo-Saxons, while the Scots, welsh and Irish are the descendants of the Celts.4.The major languages spoken in Britain are English, Gaelic and Welsh.5.The Church of England is the established church of the English nation.6.Protestant churches not belonging to the Church of England are called Free Churches, including such sects as Baptists, the United Reformed Church, Methodists and Quakers.7. The Roman Catholic Church was much persecuted in England for a long time after the Reformation.8.Most of the British social customs are based on the Christian tradition.9.During World WarⅡ,Britain was forced to borrow large amounts of money from the United States and Canada.10.Under Margaret Thatcher, public Expenditure was reduced, foreign exchange controls lifted ,rules governing banks Loosened and worker strikes restricted.11.The Conservative Party carried out an extensive programme of Privatization throughout the 1980s12.The negative aspect of Thatcher's reform was a rapid increase in taxation.13.Britain's traditional customers in trade were the commonwealth countries and its former colonies. Now Britain trades mainly with the common Market, the US and Canada.14.the British government is established on the basis of constitutional monarchy.15.Britain has no written constitution and many of the rules that govern the system are customs or conventions and ordinary laws.16.Theoretically, the Queen has all the power, but in reality, she must act on the advice of the ministers.17.Parliament consists of the monarch/sovereign, the House of commons and the House of Lords.18.The President of the House of Lords is the Lord chancellor and the presiding officer of the House of Commons is "Mr. speaker" .19.Parliament's main functions are debate, making laws and supervising the government and financing.20.The Prime Minister controls not only the cabinet but also the Parliament。
英美概况考试题汇总一、英国部分1. 英国的全名:大不列颠及北爱尔兰联合王国。
国家元首:女王伊丽莎白二世。
国土面积:24.36万平方公里。
人口:6020万。
首相:戈登·布朗。
分四个部分:英格兰、威尔士、苏格兰、北爱尔兰。
首府分别为:伦敦、加迪夫、爱丁堡和贝尔法斯特。
大伦敦市下设一个对的金融城(City of London)和32个城区(London Boroughs)。
2. 英国最长的河流是:塞文河(354公里);最重要的河流为泰晤士河,流经伦敦,全长346公里。
最大的湖泊讷湖,在北爱尔兰境内,面积396平方公里。
3. 英国的气候主要受北大西洋暖流的影响,属海洋性温带阔叶林气候。
终年温和多雨。
天气易变,难以预测。
4. 1707年英格兰与苏格兰合并,不列颠岛统一。
1801年又与爱尔兰合并。
1922年爱尔兰南部脱离英国统治,成立爱尔兰共和国。
5. 现代英国民族的基本成分是三个日耳曼部族,他们是:盎格鲁、萨克森和朱特。
6. 爱德华一世最后终于在1282年成功征服了威尔士北部和西部的最后一个当地的威尔士公国(大约是今天的安格鲁西郡、凯尔纳冯夏尔郡、麦里昂斯郡、塞勒狄琼郡和凯尔马瑟夏尔郡这块地区),并且在两年之后透过《罗德兰法令》(Statute of Rhuddlan)确立了爱德华一世对此地的统治。
为了平息威尔士人,爱德华一世出生于威尔士的儿子(后来的爱德华二世)在1301年2月7日这天被封为威尔士亲王。
这块直接在王室统治下的地区,便称作威尔士公国(1284年—1536年)。
将威尔士亲王这个头衔封给英国君主的长子便成为了传统,到现今都还持续实行中。
从1284年到1536年之间,英国君主只有对威尔士公国有直接的控制权,而其他边界地区的领主则独立于王权之外(他们统治有威尔士东部和南部地区)。
1536年颁布的《联合法案》才进一步完成了英格兰和威尔士在政治和行政上的统一。
这个联合法案将威尔士划分为13个郡,分别是:安格鲁西郡、布莱根郡、凯尔纳冯郡、卡尔狄更郡、凯尔马瑟郡、丹比夫郡、佛林特郡、葛莱摩根郡、麦里昂斯郡、蒙茅斯郡、蒙哥马里郡、彭布鲁克郡和拉德诺郡。
英美概况知识点总结英美是指英国和美国这两个英语为官方语言的国家。
它们在政治、经济、文化等方面有许多共同点,同时也存在一些差异。
下面将从地理、历史、政治、经济、文化等方面对英美进行总结。
地理概况:英美两国都位于北美洲,但地理位置有一些差异。
英国是一个由大不列颠岛和北爱尔兰组成的岛国,位于欧洲西北部的大西洋上。
美国则位于北美洲的中北部,东临大西洋,西濒太平洋。
历史概况:英国是一个历史悠久的国家,拥有世界上最古老的君主制度。
英国曾经是世界上最大的殖民帝国,统治过许多地区。
美国则是一个相对年轻的国家,于1776年宣布独立,脱离英国殖民统治。
美国独立后逐渐发展成为世界上最强大的国家之一。
政治概况:英国是一个君主立宪制国家,国家元首是女王,但实际上的政府首脑是首相。
英国的政治制度相对稳定,以议会制度为基础。
美国是一个联邦制共和国,国家元首是总统,政府采取三权分立的制度。
美国的政治制度注重个人自由和权利保护。
经济概况:英国是世界上第六大经济体,拥有发达的市场经济和先进的金融体系。
主要经济领域包括金融服务、制造业、创意产业等。
美国是世界上最大的经济体,拥有高度发达的市场经济和先进的科技产业。
主要经济领域包括金融服务、制造业、科技产业等。
文化概况:英国是文化的发源地之一,拥有丰富的文化遗产和悠久的文学传统。
莎士比亚、狄更斯等文学巨匠都是英国的代表作家。
英国还有伦敦的剧院、博物馆等文化场所吸引着世界各地的游客。
美国是一个多元文化的国家,吸引了许多移民和不同文化背景的人。
美国的文化产业非常发达,好莱坞电影、流行音乐等在世界范围内有着广泛影响。
总结:英美两国在地理、历史、政治、经济、文化等方面都有许多共同点,同时也存在一些差异。
英国是一个历史悠久、文化底蕴深厚的国家,而美国则是一个相对年轻、多元文化的国家。
两国都在世界上扮演着重要的角色,对全球发展和影响具有重要意义。
《英美概况教案》PPT课件目录•英美国家概述•英国概况•美国概况•英美教育体制比较•英美旅游资源推荐•总结回顾与拓展延伸PART01英美国家概述地理位置与自然环境地理位置英国位于欧洲大陆西北面,被北海、英吉利海峡、凯尔特海、爱尔兰海和大西洋包围;美国位于北美洲中部,北与加拿大接壤,南靠墨西哥湾,西临太平洋,东濒大西洋。
自然环境英国地形以平原为主,气候温和多雨,四季分明;美国地形复杂多样,气候类型丰富,包括温带大陆性气候、温带海洋性气候、地中海气候等。
历史发展与文化传承历史发展英国历史悠久,经历了罗马入侵、中世纪封建制度、文艺复兴、工业革命等重要时期;美国历史相对较短,但发展迅速,经历了独立战争、西进运动、南北战争、两次世界大战等关键事件。
文化传承英国文化以绅士文化、下午茶文化、皇家文化等为代表,具有深厚的文化底蕴;美国文化以自由、民主、创新为核心,融合了世界多元文化。
政治制度及特点政治制度英国实行君主立宪制,国家元首为女王,政府首脑为首相;美国实行总统共和制,国家元首和政府首脑均为总统。
政治特点英国政治稳定,政府更迭较少,政策制定和执行相对缓慢;美国政治竞争激烈,政府更迭频繁,政策制定和执行迅速。
经济实力与产业结构经济实力英国和美国均为世界经济强国,拥有庞大的经济总量和强大的国际竞争力。
产业结构英国经济以服务业为主导,制造业和金融业也较为发达;美国经济以服务业和高科技产业为主导,制造业和农业也占据重要地位。
PART02英国概况公元前55年与54年,罗马将军朱利叶斯·凯撒两次率军入侵不列颠,虽未成功,但对不列颠产生了深远影响。
罗马入侵与不列颠的崛起5-6世纪,盎格鲁-撒克逊人从欧洲大陆迁徙至不列颠,逐渐形成了英格兰的雏形。
盎格鲁-撒克逊人的迁徙与定居1066年,诺曼底的威廉公爵征服英格兰,建立了诺曼王朝,并引入了欧洲大陆的封建制度。
诺曼征服与封建制度的建立1688年,英国爆发光荣革命,推翻了斯图亚特王朝的专制统治,确立了君主立宪制。
第一篇英联邦第一章土地和人民第一节英吉利群岛和大不列颠一、名字和位置当读英文书籍的时候,一个人应当理解下面几个名词:A)英吉利群岛;B)不列颠(大不列颠);C)英格兰,苏格兰,威尔士;D)北爱尔兰E)联合王国——大不列颠及北爱尔兰联合王国欧洲大陆西部边缘及西部以外,有数千座岛,通常被叫做英吉利群岛。
群岛中最大的岛屿叫做大不列颠,为了简单起见,简称不列颠,不过官方正式名称仍为大不列颠。
它南北走向近1000公里,东西绵延约500公里,面积大约为23万平方公里。
但是大不列颠及北爱尔兰联合王国的整体面积也只是稍多与24万平方公里,人口为5740万(1990)。
就大不列颠岛本身而言,被分为三部分,也被认为是三个国家:地处南部的英格兰,北部的苏格兰,和东南部的威尔士。
英格兰是三个政治实体中最大、最发达的一部分,土地面积超过13万平方公里,占了整个大不列颠岛近60%;人口超过4700万,约为正个国家的85%。
英格兰在大不列颠的地位如此重要以至于外国人称呼整个大不列颠为“英格兰”,这种习俗也用在了对人的称呼上,占多数的英格兰人被认为等同于“英国人”。
在面积和人口上,苏格兰都居第二位,78760平方公里的土地占不列颠岛不到30%,500万的人口不足整座岛的十分之一。
威尔士在面积和人口上都是最小的,面积20700平方公里,仅为9%,人口300万,约为全岛的5%。
在18世纪(1707)前,整座岛并不叫做大不列颠。
公元5世纪的时候,来自北欧叫做Angle s部落、S axons部落、Ju tes部落的入侵者占据了岛屿南部并据为己有,那时才开始采用英格兰的名字。
英美概况英国人口英语作文The population of the United Kingdom, often referred to as Britain or England, has a rich and complex history thatis closely intertwined with its social, political, and economic developments. Over the centuries, the populationof this island nation has undergone significant changes, shaped by factors such as immigration, industrialization, and urbanization.In the early medieval period, the population of Britain was relatively small and concentrated in rural areas. However, with the advent of the Industrial Revolution inthe late 18th century, there was a rapid growth in urban centers as people migrated from the countryside to seek employment in factories and mills. This led to asignificant increase in the overall population, as well asa shift in the demographic distribution from rural to urban areas.In the 20th century, the population of Britaincontinued to grow, but at a slower rate. This was partlydue to improvements in healthcare and living conditions, which led to longer life expectancies and lower death rates.However, the rate of population growth also began to be influenced by other factors such as emigration,particularly after the Second World War, when many Britons sought new opportunities overseas.More recently, the population of Britain has been shaped by increasing levels of immigration. This has been particularly evident since the late 20th century, as the country has become a destination for people from all over the world seeking a better life. This influx of immigrants has had a significant impact on the demographic makeup of the country, bringing new cultures, languages, and perspectives to British society.Today, the population of Britain stands at over 68 million people, making it one of the most populous countries in Europe. The population is diverse and includes people of various ethnic backgrounds, religions, and cultures. This diversity is reflected in the rich and vibrant cultural life of the country, which includes a mix of traditional and contemporary elements.In terms of age distribution, the population of Britain is relatively evenly spread across different age groups.However, there is a trend towards an older population, with a significant proportion of the population now falling into the older age brackets. This is partly due to improvementsin healthcare and longer life expectancies, but alsoreflects the demographic changes that have occurred overthe centuries.In conclusion, the population of Britain has a long and complex history that has been shaped by a variety of factors. From the early medieval period to the present day, the country has seen significant changes in its demographic makeup, reflecting the social, political, and economic developments that have taken place over time. The diversity and vitality of British society today are testament to the rich tapestry of its population.**英美概况英国人口英语作文中文翻译**英国的人口,通常被称为不列颠或英格兰,其历史丰富而复杂,与社会、政治和经济发展紧密相连。
英语(翻译方向)课程大纲目录1.基础英语(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)Basic English(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)2.高级英语(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)Advanced English(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)3.语音English Pronunciation and Intonation4.听力(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)Listening(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)5.口语(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)Oral English(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)6.阅读(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)Reading(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)7.写作(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)Writing(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、Ⅲ、Ⅳ)8.语法(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)Grammar(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)9.交替传译(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、III)Consecutive Interpretation(Ⅰ、Ⅱ、III)10.翻译理论Translation Theory11.英汉翻译English-Chinese Translation12.汉英翻译Chinese-English Translation13.英语视听说Audio-visual-oral English14.语言学导论An Introduction to Linguistics15.英国文学(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)British Literature(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)16.美国文学(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)American Literature(Ⅰ、Ⅱ)17.学术论文写作Academic Thesis Writing18.英美概况An Introduction to Britain and America19.英语词汇学English Lexicology20.英语报刊选读Selected Readings of English Newspapers and Magazines21.文体与翻译Stylistics and Translation22.修辞与翻译Rhetorics and Translation23.同声传译Simultaneous Interpretation24.汉英对比概论An Introduction to Comparative Studies between Chinese andEnglish25.中西文化比较Comparative Studies of Chinese and Western Cultures26.翻译欣赏与批评Translation Criticism and Appreciation27.科技翻译Science Translation28.法律翻译Legal Translation29.视译Sight Translation30.语用与翻译Pragmatics & Translation31.影视翻译Film and TV Translation32.商务翻译Commercial Translation33.日语Japanese基础英语(Basic English)基础英语是英语专业学生基础阶段的一门主干课程。
外国语言文学类Foreign language and literature category综合英语Comprehensive English报刊选读Selected Readings of Newspaper & Magazine高级视听Advanced Videos英国文学史History of British Literature英美文学作品选读Selected Readings of British & American Literature英汉翻译English-Chinese Translation英美报刊选读Selected British & American Newspaper Readings英美概况British & American Culture and Society英美外台选听Selected Listenings of British & American Broadcast英美文学史History of British & American Literature英语词汇学English Lexicology英语泛读Extensive Reading英语精读Intensive Reading英语口语Oral English Practice英语视听English Videos英语听力English Listening Comprehension英语写作English Writing英语语法English Grammar英语语法流派Schools of English Grammar英语语言学导论Introduction to General Linguistics英语语言专题讲座Current Issues in Language Research and Education英语语音English Phonetics英语阅读English Reading英语阅读与技巧English Reading & Skills语言学概论Introduction to Linguistics语义学Semantics英汉口译English-Chinese Oral Interpretation口译Oral Intepretation口语实践Oral Practice快速阅读Fast Reading。
北京第二外国语大学试卷(2004)综合考试(英美文学)作家及作品等(40%)语言学部分(30%) 英美概况:(40%) 翻译:(40%)(汉译英20%,英译汉20%)I.Answer all the following questions.(10%)Explain the following :1.the Pilgrims(1) In England, there had been a group of people called Puritan who had broken away from the Church of England and formed their own churches. Later they fled to Holland to escape the persecution in their native land. (2) Several years passed when they were again threatened by religious suppression, they thought of moving, and this time to American. (3) They began to call themselves Pilgrim because of their wanderings in search of religious freedom. (4) In 1620, they crossed the Atlantic in the ship Mayflower and settled at Plymouth, Massachusetts.2. Boston Tea Party (1) In the years following the French and Indian War, British Government enforced several acts which were bitterly opposed by colonists.(2) In order to ease tensions, British government removed all the new taxes except that on tea. (3) In 1773, a group of patriots responed to the tea tax by staging the Boston Tea Party. Disguised as Indians, they boarded British merchant ships and tossed 342 crates of tea into Boston harbour. (4) British parliament then passed “ the Intolerable Acts”, and in response to this, the First Continental was held in Sep.1774.II. Choose the correct answer in each of the following(15%)1.美国独立前有几个洲(35 1348 50)2.哪一个不是New England 的洲(Connecticut New York State New Hampshire Vermont)3.哪个州是最晚加入the Union (Kentucky Pennsylvania Arizona Alaska)4.下列那个名称不在New York City(Hollywood Broadway Rockefeller Centre Harlem)5. 那几个州是大西洋中部的洲(mid-Atlantic States)(6 5 11 4) III.(15%)Explain the characteristics of the uniformity in American cultureand give your own evaluation.北京第二外国语大学试卷(2005)综合考试(英美文学)(50%) 语言学部分(50%)综合考试(英1,英2)(英美概况)(50%)I. 解释(15%)1.pioneering spirit (1) In the mid-nineteenth centry, it was this pioneering spirit that led American settlers to travel westward by the thousands in search of land and gold. (2) It is still an important part of the American character . (3) Today, Northerners and Midwesterners are attracted to the West because of good business opportunities and a mild climate.2. Separation of powers Influenced by Montesquieu‟s theory of division of powers, the US Constitution ruled that political structures should share out political power between legislative, executive and judicial authorities, and that these authorities should exercise checks against each other.II.选择正确答案(15%)1.下面有关美国宪法的表述那个是不对的。
英语国家概况范文《英语国家概况》课程标准一、课程定位《英语国家概况》是高职应用英语专业学生的专业知识必修课。
本课程的设置是为了使学生了解英美等几个主要英语国家的地理、历史、经济、政治等方面的概况,了解英语国家的文化传统、风俗习惯和社会生活的其它情况,以提高学生对文化差异的敏感性、宽容性和处理文化差异的灵活性,培养学生的跨文化交际能力;加深对语言的理解,提高分析和批判的能力;提高学生的思想道德素质、文化素质和心理素质。
为学生毕业后所从事的中小学英语教学工作打下扎实的英语文化根底知识和英语语言应用能力。
前导课程是《语音》课程、《精读》、《听说》等语言根底课程,通过这些课程的学习使学生具备扎实的英语听、说、读等根本功底,掌握英语的根本知识、为《英语国家概况》的学习打下根底。
后续课程是《商务礼仪》、《英美文学》和《英美文学欣赏》。
二、课程教学目标本课程的教学目标是使本专业学生了解六个主要英语国家的地理、历史、经济、政治等方面的概况,了解英语国家的文化传统、风俗习惯和社会生活的其它情况,使学生养成不断联系当前实际,密切关注国际局势的习惯,并能迅速准确地查阅资料,在储藏丰富背景知识的同时,稳固和提高英语水平。
1、知识目标:系统了解英美国家的地理、历史、政治、经济、文化等知识。
理解和掌握英美国家重要历史变革、重要人物、政治体制、经济政策。
分析中西文化的差异,深刻理解洋为中用,求同存异的思想。
2、能力目标:进一步扎实学生的英语根底,扩大词汇量,扩大阅读量,用英语进展展示和演讲,学以致用,加强语言表达的流利性和准确性。
能运用英语讨论和讲解地理、历史等相关的学科知识。
能运用英语分析和阐述与生活严密相关的政治、经济和文化等问题,培养良好的思辨能力。
3、素质目标:增强学生们对文化差异的敏感性和宽容性,及处理这些文化差异的灵活性。
渗透了积极向上的西方人文思想,有利提升学生的人文素养,培养学生独立自信、诚信守法、回报社会的良好操守。
英美概况复习此为大学英语专业考试内容,下文含翻译。
USAI. Geography1. Geographic Features1.1 The Eastern HighlandsFormed by the Appalachian Range.?1. An average elevation of 800 meters above the sea level.?2. The highest peak:? Mount Mitchell (1856 m):the highest peak of the Appalachian Range ?3. East: the narrow Atlantic Coast plain1.2 The Central Plains1. Vast plains between the Appalachian Mountains and the Rocky Mountains?2. Drained by the Mississippi River and its tributaries?3. Usually divided into two regions:?1) the Great Plains in the west: vast treeless prairies in the west and agricultural areas in the east?2) the Central Lowland in the east: from the five Great Lakes to central Texas1.3 The Western MountainsHigh plateaus and mountainous country?1. The Rocky Mountains: over 3,000 meters above the sea level?The continental divide of the United States ?2. West of the Rockies:? the Columbia Plateau in the north ?the Colorado Plateau in the southGrand Canyon,the Great Basin in between?The Pacific Mountain System consists of three regions: The Cascade Range, the Sierra-Nevada, and the Pacific Coast Range.?The Sierras contain Mount Whitney (4421m), the highest peak in the US outside Alaska.?Death Valley in eastern California, 85 meters below sea level2. ClimateThe United States has a large size and a wide range of geographic features. Every type of climate is represented in the country: The climate is temperate in most areas, tropical in Hawaii and southern Florida, polar in Alaska, semi-arid in the Great Plains west of the 100th meridian, desert in the Southwest, Mediterranean in Coastal California, arid in the Great Basin?Extreme weather is common: the states bordering the Gulf of Mexico are prone to hurricanes, and most of the world's tornadoes occur within the continental United States, primarily in the Midwest.3. RiversThe Mississippi River (Great River, Big River in Indian language) is 3,770 km long: the second longest river in the United States. It originates from Minnesota and empties into the Gulf of Mexico.?The Missouri River is 4,090 km long. It is the longest river (longest branch of the Mississippi). It is a Mississippi tributary, flowing from the confluence of the Jefferson, Madison, and Gallatin and emptying into the Mississippi River.The length of the Mississippi-Missouri-Jefferson combination is approximately 6,262 km?The Arkansas River (2,364 km) is the second longest tributary of the Mississippi River. The Ohio River is the largest Mississippi tributary measured by water volume.?The Yukon River is a major watercourse of northwestern North America. Rising in British Columbia, Canada, it runs 3,700 km long, emptying into the Bering Sea.5 great lakesII. American History1. Where did the first Americans come from and why did they migrate to America?Book P 4-52. American Civil warThe American Civil War (1861–1865), also known as the War Between the States, was a civil war in the United States of America. Eleven Southern slave states declared their secession from the U.S. and formed the Confederate States of America (the Confederacy). Led by Jefferson Davis, they fought against the U.S. federal government (the “Union”), which was supported by all the free states and the five border slave states.2.1 The CausesThe coexistence of a slave-owning South with an increasingly anti-slavery North made conflict likely. Lincoln did not propose federal laws against slavery where it already existed, but he had, in his 1858 House Divided Speech, expressed a desire to “arrest the further spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction”. Much of the political battle in the 1850s focused on the expansion of slavery into the newly created territories. All of the organized territories were likely to become free-soil states, which increased the Southern movement toward secession. Both North and South assumed that if slavery could not expand it would wither and die.The coexistence of a slave-owning South with an increasingly anti-slaveryNorth made conflict likely. Lincoln did not propose federal laws against slavery where it already existed, but he had, in his 1858 House Divided Speech, expressed a desire to “arrest the further spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction”. Much of the political battle in the 1850s focused on the expansion of slavery into the newly created territories. All of the organized territories were likely to become free-soil states, which increased the Southern movement toward secession. Both North and South assumed that if slavery could not expand it would wither and die. Southern fears of losing control of the federal government to antislavery forces, and Northern fears that the slave power already controlled the government, brought the crisis to a head in the late 1850s. Sectional disagreements over the morality of slavery, the scope of democracy and the economic merits of free labor vs. slave plantations caused the Whig and “Know-Nothing” parties to collapse, and new ones to arise (the Free Soil Party in 1848, the Republicans in 1854, the Constitutional Union in 1860). In 1860, the last remaining national political party, the Democratic Party, split along sectional lines.2.2 Factors Affecting the Process and ResultsWhat greatly affected the process as well as the result of the war were the differences between the South and the North in their strategies, geographical features, technology, and manpower and finance.2.2.1 StrategiesAs men poured into the armies, Northern and Southern leaders discussed strategies that would achieve victory.Northern armies would have to invade the Confederacy, destroy its capacity to wage war, and crush the will of the Southern people to resist. The Confederacy could win by prolonging the war to a point where the Northern people would consider the effort too costly in lives and money to persist.The South had a compelling example in the American Revolution of a seemingly weaker power defeating a much stronger one. If the North chose not to mount a military effort to coerce the seceded states back into the Union, the Confederacy would win independence by default.Lincoln and other Northern leaders, however, had no intention of letting the Southern states go without a fight. The most prominent American military figure in the spring of 1861 was Winfield Scott, the general-in-chief of the United States Army. With a brilliant mind, Scott conceived a long-range strategy to bring Northern victory. Scott’s plan sought to apply pressure on the Confederacy from all sides. A combined force of naval and army units would sweep down the Mississippi River, d ividing the Confederacy’s eastern and western states. At the same time, the Union navy would institute a blockade to deny the Confederacy access to European manufactured goods. Should the South continue to resist evenafter the loss of the Mississippi and the closing of its ports, Scott envisioned a major invasion into the heart of the Confederacy.2.2.2 GeographyGeography played a major role in how effectively the two sides were able to carry out their strategies.The sheer size of the Confederacy posed a daunting obstacle to Northern military forces. Totaling more than 1,940,000 km2 and without a well-developed network of roads, the Southern landscape challenged the North’s ability to supply armies that maneuvered at increasing distances from Union bases.It was also almost impossible to make the North’s blockade of Southern ports completely effective because the South’s coastline stretched 5600 km and contained nearly 200 harbors and mouths of navigable rivers.The Appalachian Mountains also hindered rapid movement of Northern forces between the eastern and western areas of the Confederacy while the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia offered a protected route through which Confederate armies could invade the North.The placement of Southern rivers, however, favored the North. The Mississippi, Tennessee, and Cumberland rivers provided excellent north-south avenues of advance for Union armies west of the Appalachians.2.2.3 TechnologyTechnological advances helped both sides deal with the great distances over which the armies fought. The Civil War was the first large conflict that featured railroads and the telegraph. Railroads rapidly moved hundreds of thousands of soldiers and vast quantities of supplies; the North contained almost twice as many miles of railroad lines as the South. Telegraphic communication permitted both governments to coordinate military movements on sprawling geographical fronts.The combatants also took advantage of numerous other recent advances in military technology. The most important was the rifle musket carried by most of the infantrymen on both sides. The rifle musket, with an effective range of 225 to 275 meters, allowed defenders to break up attacks long before they reached the defenders’ positions.Other new technologies included ironclad warships, which were used by both sides; the deployment of manned balloons for aerial reconnaissance on battlefields, used mainly by the North. The technology for all of these weapons had been present before the Civil War, but never before had armies applied the technology so widely.2.2.4 Manpower and FinanceAt the beginning of the war, state militias provided most of the troops for both Union and Confederate armies. Soon large numbers of civilianswere volunteering for military service. Throughout the war, the bulk of the forces consisted of volunteers.When the number of volunteers lagged behind the growing battle casualties, both the Northern and Southern governments resorted to drafting men into the armies. The Confederacy passed the first draft act in April 1862. The Union followed almost a year later.Although the draft itself did not produce a sufficient number of soldiers, the threat of being drafted led many to volunteer and collect a bounty, which was paid to volunteers. Some soldiers were unscrupulous enough to enlist, desert, and reenlist to collect the bounty more than once.The Civil War, like all wars, called for great sums of money to pay troops and supply them with equipment. At the outset of the war the Confederacy depended on loans, but this source of finance soon disappeared as Southerners began to be affected financially by the cost of the war and unable to buy bonds. Instead it relied on paper money, freely printed. The Confederacy suffered greatly from severe inflation and debt throughout the war. The Confederate rate of inflation was about 9200%.The Union financed its armies by loans and taxes to a much greater degree than the Confederacy, even resorting to an income tax. The people of the North were more prosperous than those of the South. A national banking system was established by Congress to stimulate sales of U.S. bonds. Northerners had savings with which they could buy the bonds and had earnings from which taxes could be taken.2.3 The Process2.6.1 Eastern Theater (1861-1863)2.6.3 Western Theater (1861-1863)2.6.4 Trans-Mississippi Theater (1861-1865)3. America in World War IWorld War I, military conflict, from August 1914 to November 1918, that involved many of the countries of Europe as well as the United States and other nations throughout the world.World War I was one of the most violent and destructive wars in European history.Of the 65 million men who were mobilized, more than 10 million were killed and more than 20 million wounded.The term World War I did not come into general use until a second worldwide conflict broke out in 1939. Before that year, the war was known as the Great War or the World War.1.1 Coalitions InvolvedThe war began as a clash between two coalitions of European countries.The first coalition, known as the Allied Powers, included the United Kingdom, France, Belgium, Serbia, Montenegro, and the Russian Empire.The Central Powers, which opposed them, consisted of the empires of Germany and Austria-Hungary.1.2 The Immediate CauseThe immediate cause of the war was the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand, the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, by a Serbian nationalist.The fundamental causes of the conflict, however, were rooted deeply in the European history of the previous century, particularly in the political and economic policies that prevailed in Europe after 1871, the year that Germany emerged as a major European power.2. The Great DepressionOn October 24, 1929, the American stock market crashed. Billions of dollars of paper profits were wiped out within a few hours. This led to a long economic depression.However, the post-war industrial boom and the prosperity were soon to vanish. The Great Depression in the United States, worst and longest economic collapse in the history of the modern industrial world, began from the end of 1929 until the early 1940s.2.1 The CausesThe depression was caused by a number of serious weaknesses in the economy.It is a common misconception that the stock market crash of October 1929 was the cause of the Great Depression. The two events were closely related, but both were the results of deep problems in the modern economy that were building up through the “prosperity decade” of the 1920s.As is typical of post-war periods, Americans in the Roaring Twenties turned inward, away from international issues and social concerns and toward greater individualism.The self-centered attitudes of the 1920s seemed to fit nicely with the needs of the economy. Modern industry had the capacity to produce vast quantities of consumer goods, but this created a fundamental problem: Prosperity could continue only if demand was made to grow as rapidly as supply. Accordingly, people had to be persuaded to abandon such traditional values as saving, postponing pleasures and purchases, and buying only what they needed. Advertising methods were used to persuade people to buy such relatively new products as automobiles and such completely new ones as radios and household appliances. The resulting mass consumption kept the economy going through most of the 1920s.But there was an underlying economic problem: Income was distributed very unevenly, and the portion going to the wealthiest Americans grew larger as the decade proceeded. This was due largely to two factors: While businesses showed remarkable gains in productivity during the 1920s, workers got a relatively small share of the wealth this produced. Between 1923 and 1929, manufacturing output per person-hour increased by 32 percent, but workers’ wages grew by only 8 percent. Corporate profits shot up by 65 percent in the same period.As a result of these trends, in 1929 the top 0.1 percent of American families had a total income equal to that of the bottom 42 percent. This meant that many people who were willing to purchase new products did not have enough money to do so. To get around this difficulty, the 1920s produced another innovation—“credit,” an attractive name for consumer debt. People were allowed to “buy now, pay later.”International problems also weakened the economy. After World War I the United States became the world’s chief creditor as European countries struggled to pay war debts and reparations. Many American bankers were not ready for this new role. They lent heavily and unwisely to borrowers in Europe, especially Germany, who would have difficulty repaying the loans, particularly if there was a serious economic downturn. These huge debts made the international banking structure extremely unstable by the late 1920s.In addition, the United States maintained high tariffs on goods imported from other countries, at the same time that it was making foreign loans and trying to export products. This combination could not be sustained: If other nations could not sell their goods in the United States, they could not make enough money to buy American products or repay American loans.The rising incomes of the wealthiest Americans fueled rapid growth in the stock market, especially between 1927 and 1929. Soon the prices of stocks were rising far beyond the worth of the shares of the companies they represented. People were willing to pay inflated prices because they believed the stock prices would continue to rise and they could soon sell their stocks at a profit.In 1928 the Dow Jones industrial average, an index that tracks the stock prices of key industrial companies, doubled in value in less than two years. But the stock boom could not last. The great bull market of the late 1920s was a classic example of a specul ative “bubble” scheme. In the fall of 1929 confidence that prices would keep rising faltered, then failed.Starting in late October the market plummeted as investors began selling stocks. On October 29, known as Black Tuesday, the worst day of the panic, stocks lost $10 billion to $15 billion in value. By mid-November almost all of the gains of the previous two years had been wiped out, withlosses estimated at $30 billion.The stock market crash announced the beginning of the Great Depression.2.3 R oosevelt’s New DealThe initial government response to the Great Depression was ineffective, as President Hoover insisted that the economy was sound and that prosperity would soon return.But business owners saw no reason to increase production while unsold goods clogged their shelves. By 1932 investment had dropped to less than 5 percent of its 1929 level. By the election year of 1932, the depression had made Hoover so unpopular that the election of the Democratic presidential candidate Franklin Delano Roosevelt was all but assured. Shortly after his inauguration in 1933, Roosevelt quickly lifted the nation’s spirits with the rapid and unprecedented actions of the New Deal.The New Deal produced a wide variety of programs to reduce unemployment, assist businesses and agriculture, regulate banking and the stock market, and provide security for the needy, elderly, and disabled. The basic idea of early New Deal programs was to lower the supply of goods to the current, depressed level of consumption. The government sought to raise farm prices by paying farmers not to grow surplus crops and to create codes for many industries that regulated competition while guaranteeing minimum wages and maximum hours for workers. The New Deal also tried to increase demand, pumping large amounts of money into the economy through public works programs and relief measures.Public works projects not only provided jobs but built schools, dams, and roads. The New Deal helped people to survive the depression. Unemployment was reduced, but remained high through the 1930s. Farm income rose from a low of $1.9 billion in 1932 to $4.2 billion in 1940. The demands of the depression led the United States to institute social-security programs and accept labor unions, measures that had been taken decades earlier in many European nations.3.2.1 US and Japanese ConflictIn the final result, however, the United States had little choice in the matter. When France had fallen to Germany, Japan had begun to move into French Indo-China, which had been France's source of rubber and was thought to be rich in oil. The United States government had no desire to see Japan in possession of its own stocks of these essential resources and so threatened to place an embargo on these goods. The Japanese responded in an unexpected way. On Sunday, 7 December 1941, Japanese naval aircraft attacked the U.S. Pacific fleet at anchor at Pearl Harbor in the Hawaiian islands. The Pearl Harbor Attack brought the United States into the war on December 8. Germany and Italy declared war on the United Stateson DecemberThe CongressThe United StatesCongress is the bicameral legislature of the federal government of the United States of America, consisting of two houses, the Senate and the House of Representatives. Both senators and representatives are chosen through direct election.As provided by the United States Constitution, each of the 435 members of the House of Representatives represents a district and serves a two-year term. House seats are apportioned among the states by population. The 100 Senators serve staggered six-year terms. Each state has two senators, regardless of population. Every two years, approximately one-third of the Senate is elected.checks and balances:The government is divided into three branches, the legislative, the executive and the judicial, each has part of the powers but not all the power. And each branch of government can check, or block, the actions of the other branches. The three branches are thus in balance. This called “checks and balances”.What is American General Education?见书English2.1 The Iberians1) They are the earliest settlers on the British Isles.2.2 The Celts1) From 700 B.C. Celts came in several successive waves from the Upper Rhineland and began to inhabit British Isles.2) The fair-haired Celts imposed themselves as an aristocracy on the conquered tribes of Iberians throughout Britain and Ireland.3) These people found refuge in the mountains to the north and west.4) At least two big waves of Celtic invasion can be distinguished: first the Gaels or Goidels, still found in Ireland and Scotland, came over as early as 600 B.C.; secondly the Cymric and Brythons, still found in Wales, come over before 300 B.C.3. Roman Britain3.1 Roman InvasionRoman Britain refers to those parts of the island of Great Britain controlled by the Roman Empire between AD 43 and 410.The Romans referred to their province as Britannia.Prior to the Roman invasion, Iron Age Britain already had cultural and economic links with Continental Europe, but the invaders introduced new developments in agriculture, urbanization, industry and architecture, leaving a legacy that is still apparent today.It is believed that the Celts were related with the ancient people in what is now France. They gave some help in the struggle to resist the Roman invasion of France. As a result, the Roman army, commanded by Julius Caesar, invaded England in 55 BC. He landed in Kent with several thousand Roman troops, but meeting resistance and bad weather, the Roman withdrew soon after. In the following year, Julius Caesar and the Romans went across the English Channel and invaded Britain for the second time. Julius Caesar and his soldiers did not stay long in England before they withdrew again. The invasion marked the beginning of English recorded history because Julius Caesar kept a diary and wrote down what he saw in England. The successful invasion of England by the Romans did not take place until nearly a century later, in 43 AD, headed by the Emperor Claudius I. The Romans did not meet with much resistance on the part of the natives and soon got possession of what is now England by driving many of the native Celts into mountainous Scotland and Wales. The Romans failed to conquer Scotland, they built two great walls, the Hadrian’s Wall and the Antonine Wall, along the northern border of England to prevent the Picts in Scotland from invading England.3.2 Influences of Roman InvasionThe 3d and 4th centuries witnessed the decline of the Roman Empire. In 410 Rome abandoned Britain.1. Roman urban civilization, baths and amphitheaters, as well Hadrian’s Wall. People who spoke Latin and wore togas. Numerous villas——vast estates worked by slaves and featuring sumptuous noble dwellings—were also established. Beyond these, the countryside remained Celtic.2. A network of roads, still in use for 1400 years;3. A number of towns. They introduced a system of organized government and built a network of towns, mostly walled. These town used names ending with “ster”, “cester”, or “shire” -- Leicester, Worcester and Yorkshire—deriving from castra, the Latin word for camp; the Roman capital was London.4. Christianity; the Romans brought the new religion, Christianity, to Britain. This came at first by indirect means, probably brought by traders and soldiers, before the first Christian Emperor, Constantine, we proclaimed in 306 AD.5. Water and sewage systems.1.1 Anglo-SaxonSoon after the Romans left, a band of new invaders landed in the southern part of England, in what is now the country of Kent. They were known in history as the Jutes. Other Germanic tribes came trooping after them. This continued for many years. The Saxons came from northern Germany and established their kingdoms in Essex (East Saxow), Succes (South Saxon) and Wessex (West Saxon). In the second half of the 6th century, the Angles, also from northern Germans, came and settled in the east part of England. After the newcomers had taken possession of all the land now known as England, the movement, know in history as the Anglo-Saxon Conquest, was complete. But we must bear in mind that theses Germanic tribes never obtained possession of what we now call Scotland, Wales and Ireland. The inhabitants of these countries were still Celts.The England was divided into seven principal kingdoms, known as Heptarchy in English history: Northumbria, Mercia, Kent, East Anglia, Essex, Sussex and Wessex were the main polities of south Britain.The influence of Anglo-Saxon?The Anglo-Saxons laid the foundations of the English state. They divided the country into shires, with shire courts and shire reeves, or sheriffs, responsible for administering law.?They devised the narrow-strip, three-field farming system which continued to the 18th century. In this system, the arable land around a village was divided into three hedgeless (open) big fields. These fields were divided into narrow strips which were shared out among the villagers. Good land was thus fairly distributed. One great field was left “fallow” each year so that its soil could recover its richness after two years’ cultivation.?They set up the basis of the English agrarian civilization and subsistence farming. There were wastelands, known as commons, which were used by villagers to graze livestock and get firewood. This system was the basis of the English agrarian civilization and subsistence farming. It helped to shape the English community life and the Anglo-Saxon concept of equality.?They created the Witan(council or meeting of the wisemen) to advise the king, the basis of the Privy Council which still exists today.2. Viking Invasion (800–1066)In the 8th century, the Vikings from theScandinavian countries of northern Europe, Norway and Denmark, began to attack the English coast. In the process of resisting the Vikings, the 7 Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in England gradually became united under Alfred the Great.Alfred was a king of Wessex. He was not only an able warrior but also adedicated scholar and a wise ruler. He defeated the Danes and reached a friendly agreement with them in 879. The Danes gained control of the north and east, while he ruled the rest. He also converted some leading Danes into Christians.He founded a strong fleet and is known as “ the father of the British navy”. He reorganized the Saxon army, making it more efficient. He translated a Latin book into English. He also established schools and formulated a legal system.After the death of Alfred, his successors were not as capable as he had been. Taking advantage of the situation, more Dane came and set about taking possession of the entire country. The Anglo-Saxon king didn’t care for fighting, but he dreamed of buying off the Danes. As a result, more invaders came. In 1016, the Witan chose Canute, the Danish leader, as king of England. Canute, who made England part of a Scandinavian empire which included Norway as well as Denmark.3. Norman Conquest3.1 Norman Conquest: CauseAfter the death of Canute’s son, the crown was passed to Edward the Confessor, the last Anglo-Saxon king.When Edward was on his death-bed, several men laid claim to the English throne, the king of Norway, the Duke of Normandy (Edward’s cousi n), and Harold Godwinson( a brother of Edward’s wife).William, the Duke of Normandy, claimed the Edward had promised the crown to him before his death. He became very angry when he heard that Harold had taken the crown. Harold knew that William would come to measure swords with him. he was prepared to fight, placing an army on the southern coast of England to watch for William’s coming. Several months passed by and William failed to appear. He was abiding his time. When the harvest time in England came, ma ny of Harold’s soliders went back home to gather in the crops/. The coast was thus left undefended.William seized the chance and landed his army in Southeastern England in Sep. 1066. Harold, who had been fighting in the north, hurried back with the exhausted troops. They fought at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October. It was a close battle at first, but in the final hours William’s superiority in cavalry and archers proved decisive. Harold was killed, along with his brothers Earl Gyrth and Earl Leofwine, and the English army fled.William became known as William the Conqueror, the first Anglo-Norman king of England.3.2 Control of EnglandAfter Willam became the king, he took a few measures to control England Soldiers rewarded: The Normans received from William lands and titles in return for their service in the invasion.All land was the king’s: William claimed ultimate possession of。