时间:2019-02-21 作者:英语课 分类:2018年NPR美国国家公共电台12月


英语课

 


ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:


In late December, we sometimes talk to people who've had a very big year. Well, science-fiction author N.K. Jemisin has had a very big three years.


In 2016, she became the first African-American writer to win the Hugo Award for best novel. She went on to win the same prize last year, and again this year, making her the only author ever to win the award in three consecutive 1 years - for her trilogy, "Broken Earth."


The books take place in a world where natural disasters are more common and more destructive. And the people with powers to mitigate 2 those disasters are feared and oppressed.


N K JEMISIN: The core of it is that it's a story about a woman. One of her children has been killed, and the other has been kidnapped. And it effectively starts off with multiple kinds of ends of the world. The idea is that it's a story that takes place during the apocalypse, but the world ended when this woman's son was killed.


SHAPIRO: I asked N.K. Jemisin what appealed to her about using an ending as a starting point.


JEMISIN: I didn't think of it as an ending. What I wanted to play with was the concept of, you know, when do we consider an apocalypse to have begun and ended? Because in a lot of cases, you know, what's considered an apocalypse for some people is what other people have been living every day. It's not the apocalypse. It's just, you know, it's an apocalypse for you.


And so when people say, you know, the world has ended, her world has been ending for most of her life. This is nothing new.


SHAPIRO: There's a line from your third book that stood out to me. And the character who says this says it years before the apocalypse that is the central event in the series. And the line is, (reading) they are afraid because we exist. There's nothing we did to provoke their fear other than exist. There's nothing we can do to earn their approval except stop existing. So we can either die like they want or laugh at their cowardice 3 and go on with our lives.


And when I read that, I thought that could have been spoken by black people in 19th century America or Jews in 20th century Europe or Rohingya in Myanmar today.


JEMISIN: Yeah, yeah. I mean, it's - a lot of the book is speaking kind of from my personal places of frustration 4.


You know, I tell people that I wrote the first book of the trilogy, anyway, while watching Ferguson unfold on the Internet during the summer of 2014. And a lot of the anger that you kind of see, and a lot of the questions of our society that you see are me looking at, you know, tanks rolling down the streets of an American city towards an unarmed, peaceful protest and treating them like the enemy. And, you know, why are they being treated like the enemy when literally 5 all they're asking for is to not get shot?


You know, that was it. It was mostly just my frustration kind of coming through in a lot of different ways.


SHAPIRO: The series leads us towards what ultimately becomes, really, kind of a mother-daughter relationship story. And I know that you were writing the third book in the final days of your mother's life. Was this a place that you intended for this story to lead, or was it something that just came out as a reflection of what was happening in your own world?


JEMISIN: I had started to realize that Mom was faltering 6 probably around the time that I started working on this. And I wasn't really ready to admit that to myself. But, you know, in a lot of cases, my fiction has served as a form of therapy.


And, you know, kind of somewhere in the middle of working on the first book was when I began to realize kind of what I was dealing 7 with and why it was coming out this way in my fiction.


And she did pass away while I was working on the third book of the trilogy, and that became, in some ways, my epitaph to her.


SHAPIRO: Yeah. You held a day job until you were partway through writing this trilogy. I believe you were working on the third book when you became a full-time 8 writer. You had been a counselor 9 during the day.


When you look back at this three-year journey that you've traveled and where you are now, what do you see?


JEMISIN: Wow. Well, I see myself going through kind of a major life transition, which I don't think I had intended. But, you know, from my counseling work, I know that midlife crises kind of jump you when you're least expecting them.


And, you know, suddenly becoming a successful author after years of being, you know, an author who was doing OK, you don't think of that as a major life transition, but it has been.


SHAPIRO: I'm just struck by the use of your phrase, midlife crisis. Everyone should be so lucky as to have a midlife crisis that catapults them to the top of their field as an award-winning success at the thing they love to do.


JEMISIN: I know, right? But, you know, in the field, we don't actually call it midlife crisis. We call it adult in transition. So it's a transition. It's where I am.


SHAPIRO: Well, N.K. Jemisin, thank you so much for talking with us.


JEMISIN: Thank you.


SHAPIRO: She's author of "The Broken Earth" trilogy, and her new collection of short stories is called "How Long 'Til Black Future Month?"



adj.连续的,联贯的,始终一贯的
  • It has rained for four consecutive days.已连续下了四天雨。
  • The policy of our Party is consecutive.我党的政策始终如一。
vt.(使)减轻,(使)缓和
  • The government is trying to mitigate the effects of inflation.政府正试图缓和通货膨胀的影响。
  • Governments should endeavour to mitigate distress.政府应努力缓解贫困问题。
n.胆小,怯懦
  • His cowardice reflects on his character.他的胆怯对他的性格带来不良影响。
  • His refusal to help simply pinpointed his cowardice.他拒绝帮助正显示他的胆小。
n.挫折,失败,失效,落空
  • He had to fight back tears of frustration.他不得不强忍住失意的泪水。
  • He beat his hands on the steering wheel in frustration.他沮丧地用手打了几下方向盘。
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实
  • He translated the passage literally.他逐字逐句地翻译这段文字。
  • Sometimes she would not sit down till she was literally faint.有时候,她不走到真正要昏厥了,决不肯坐下来。
犹豫的,支吾的,蹒跚的
  • The economy shows no signs of faltering. 经济没有衰退的迹象。
  • I canfeel my legs faltering. 我感到我的腿在颤抖。
n.经商方法,待人态度
  • This store has an excellent reputation for fair dealing.该商店因买卖公道而享有极高的声誉。
  • His fair dealing earned our confidence.他的诚实的行为获得我们的信任。
adj.满工作日的或工作周的,全时间的
  • A full-time job may be too much for her.全天工作她恐怕吃不消。
  • I don't know how she copes with looking after her family and doing a full-time job.既要照顾家庭又要全天工作,我不知道她是如何对付的。
n.顾问,法律顾问
  • The counselor gave us some disinterested advice.顾问给了我们一些无私的忠告。
  • Chinese commercial counselor's office in foreign countries.中国驻国外商务参赞处。
学英语单词
'mid
A tree is known by its fruit
actinopterygians
athletic wear
attempt frequency
automatic telegraph switching center
bolier bearer
bull-rider
canalized channel
class mammalias
climatoloqical station
coal firing boiler
coca leaf
coincidate
colonist
compute engine
conspergative
crack fic
crossbodies
curlicuing
dead drunk
derrick head
dichlorination
direct-writing recorder
double-stage transmission
effective temperature index
efficient market
electronic polarization
endless drive chain
erratic star
exchange set
Fab fragment
fibric removal ability
fish scale disease
flow-controlling gate
force sb.'s hand
gas-pump
geodetic station
golf-pro
green area
half time
heterokontaes
hijackable
hmpt
huckabee
IAPS-forskolin
Identity Ecosystem
indusiums
Kurram Agency
La Paula
labelled Chinese medicinal herb
layband
legislatings
limited frequency range
lorettoite
Loss Carryforward
lycocerus nigricollis
machine hour standards
maizenic acid
manna sugar
milden and rot
MNHL
Morrison Formation
nuclear heat and power plant
over pin
Oxyporhamphidae
paddybird
para-compound
parasitic lung disease
peanut vine
picturs
Portsmouth defence
prairie-steppe brown soil
radially uniform circular springs
radials
rauvolfia
rogatory letter
rosenfels
safety service
Schonungen
singular
soaming
socioscientific
spight
structural breaks
subgrade strength
Sun steel
sweep second hand
tensor function
Titonka
tonsilloscope
transport pitch
uniform case
unipolar chest lead
unnose
urea oxalate dihydrate
vardi
verdoglobin
vervet monkeys
wendy
Wienerwald
zygosity diagnosis