VOA标准英语2011--Photos Explore Life of Immigrant Nannies
时间:2019-01-09 作者:英语课 分类:VOA标准英语2011年(二月)
Immigrant nannies. Stroll through any residential 1 Manhattan neighborhood and you'll see these private child-care providers walking hand in hand with their young charges, feeding them, comforting them, taking them to the park.
What is life like for these women? New York photographer Ellen Jacob wanted to find out.
Substitutes
It's mid-afternoon in Jacob's sunny Manhattan apartment, and the photographer is poring through thousands of photographs for her "Substitutes" project.
All of the images are of New York's immigrant nannies - many from West Africa or the Caribbean, some from East Asia or the Philippines. In the photos, they are tending to their young charges in Central Park, along avenue sidewalks and inside neighboring homes. The pictures make us wonder - as Jacob did - who these women are.
"It's probably the only job that I can think of where there is an expectation that you love the people that you work with, in this case the children," Jacob says, "and I wondered how the nannies felt. Would they be part of the family and then when the child gets to a certain age and they are no longer needed, they are no longer part of the family?"
For Jacob, who was raised by a black West Indian nanny named Martha, "Substitutes" is also a way to explore her own childhood. She loved Martha. In one powerful girlhood memory, she recalls sitting on her lap and being consoled by her when her beloved grandfather died.
Martha, from the West Indies, was photographer Ellen Jacob's nanny.
"My memory is of her telling me it was okay to cry and that my grandpa loved me very much and that she loved me very much." Jacob clearly gets emotional when recalling the scene "It was such a loving gesture from a woman who, quite frankly 2, was at work when she did that."
Hence the term "Substitutes" for her project.
"For a few years, nannies are, in a sense, substitute parents," she says. "They are with the children during the day, playing with them, taking care of them when they have a fight with a friend, when they have a stomach ache."
And then all of a sudden, usually when the child reaches school age, they're not. For Jacob, it is this contradictory 3 double role - nurturer 4 at the emotional heart of a child's life and expendable wage earner who can be dismissed at any time - that defines the nanny's household role.
Paradox 5
One woman from Trinidad spoke 6 to Jacob about having to leave her four-year-old daughter at home in Trinidad "And that's why she became a nanny. So she could take care of a child and feel as if she were taking care of her own child."
Another woman confided 7 that she felt left out at birthday celebrations. "The mother takes a photo of the birthday boy and gets a picture of herself being photographed and forgets to take a picture of the nanny with the child," says Jacob, "and yet the nanny feels motherly towards this child."
Another nanny decided 8 to keep some emotional distance from the children in her charge because she knew that they would grow up and her employment in the household - and thus her ongoing 9 relationship with the children - would end.
"So the women felt very attached to the children, but they also understand on some level that they were not the parent."
However, nannies so sometimes feel obliged to take on a parental 10 role in the child's emotional development. One nanny told Jacob about how the girl she took care of would hide behind her in fear as her parents viciously yelled at each other. Eventually the mother took to drink and the father stopped coming home at all. The nanny had to try to help this four-year-old girl stop acting 11 out with other children, which the nanny assumed was in response to the upheaval 12 in the household.
"The nanny felt somewhat equipped to do this but not completely. She also felt that she didn't have the authority to really make the decisions she felt needed to be made." Jacob relates how after some "gut-wrenching" soul searching, that nanny decided to find another family to work for.
Daily life
Jacob says that there are often deep differences between a nanny's culture of origin and the Manhattan milieu 13 in which they find themselves, especially in relation to childrearing, but these are usually dealt with during the interview and hiring process.
Differences in economic status can be more difficult to reconcile, however. Most client families are far wealthier and enjoy greater material comfort and security than the nannies that work for them.
"The nannies work very long hours," says Jacob. "They are often very tired, they work often 12 hour days, and then have long commutes 14 to their own homes far from high-rent Manhattan, and must often struggle for the time to have some sort of family life themselves."
Some nannies wished for health care benefits and a retirement 15 plan. "One of the nannies told me she was feeling she was getting old and that she would be, in a sense, ‘discarded' from the family and she'd have nothing in her old age to show for her years of work."
The complex relationship between mothers and nannies is also a theme in Jacob's "Substitutes." While it seems to Jacob that some mothers are jealous of the bonds of love between their children and the nanny, many mothers treat nannies as skilled professionals.
One mom, a high-powered investment banker, who expressed deep gratitude 16 that her nanny, a mother and grandmother many times over, knew far more about children than she did.
- The mayor inspected the residential section of the city.市长视察了该市的住宅区。
- The residential blocks were integrated with the rest of the college.住宿区与学院其他部分结合在了一起。
- To speak frankly, I don't like the idea at all.老实说,我一点也不赞成这个主意。
- Frankly speaking, I'm not opposed to reform.坦率地说,我不反对改革。
- The argument is internally contradictory.论据本身自相矛盾。
- What he said was self-contradictory.他讲话前后不符。
- The story contains many levels of paradox.这个故事存在多重悖论。
- The paradox is that Japan does need serious education reform.矛盾的地方是日本确实需要教育改革。
- They sourced the spoke nuts from our company.他们的轮辐螺帽是从我们公司获得的。
- The spokes of a wheel are the bars that connect the outer ring to the centre.辐条是轮子上连接外圈与中心的条棒。
- She confided all her secrets to her best friend. 她向她最要好的朋友倾吐了自己所有的秘密。
- He confided to me that he had spent five years in prison. 他私下向我透露,他蹲过五年监狱。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
- There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
- The problem is ongoing.这个问题尚未解决。
- The issues raised in the report relate directly to Age Concern's ongoing work in this area.报告中提出的问题与“关心老人”组织在这方面正在做的工作有直接的关系。
- He encourages parental involvement in the running of school.他鼓励学生家长参与学校的管理。
- Children always revolt against parental disciplines.孩子们总是反抗父母的管束。
- Ignore her,she's just acting.别理她,她只是假装的。
- During the seventies,her acting career was in eclipse.在七十年代,她的表演生涯黯然失色。
- It was faced with the greatest social upheaval since World War Ⅱ.它面临第二次世界大战以来最大的社会动乱。
- The country has been thrown into an upheaval.这个国家已经陷入动乱之中。
- Foods usually provide a good milieu for the persistence of viruses.食品通常为病毒存续提供了一个良好的栖身所。
- He was born in a social milieu where further education was a luxury.他生在一个受较高教育就被认为是奢侈的社会环境里。
- She commutes from Oxford to London every day. 她每天上下班往返于牛津与伦敦之间。
- Barbara lives in Oxford and commutes. 芭芭拉住在牛津,通勤往来。
- She wanted to enjoy her retirement without being beset by financial worries.她想享受退休生活而不必为金钱担忧。
- I have to put everything away for my retirement.我必须把一切都积蓄起来以便退休后用。