NB: This is not a word for word transcript Группа Learning English: http://vkontakte.ru/club17650165 Продолжение транскрипта: http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/6minute/101014_6min_classics.pdf
Alice: Hello – this is 6 Minute English, I'm Alice and today, I'm joined by Yvonne. Hello, Yvonne! Yvonne: Hello Alice! Alice: Now Yvonne, if I said Don Quixote, what would you say? Yvonne: Oh, it's a famous classic Spanish novel – but that's all, because sadly, I've never read it. Alice: Oh well, don't worry - because you're not the only one! In fact, Don Quixote has been described as Spain's best-known, but least read book. Yvonne: So like me, most people have heard of it, but not many people have actually read it. Alice: Exactly. But before we find out what the Royal Spanish Academy is doing about that, here's today's question: in 2005, the BBC announced the UK's bestloved - or favourite book. What was it? a) Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by JK Rowling b) The Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien or c) Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Yvonne, what was your guess before you looked up the answer? Yvonne: Well, I said Harry Potter - because I must be the only person on earth who’s never read it! Alice: Oh, me neither! Isn’t that terrible? Well we'll find out what the UK's best-loved book is later on. Now people say that most Spaniards have never managed to finish reading Don Quixote, even though it's a classic. What do you think makes a classic novel or book, Yvonne? Yvonne: Well, excellent writing that people want to continue reading into the future, but, it doesn't have to be old - although Miguel De Cervantes finished writing Don Quixote way back in 1615. Alice: No, I suppose you can have modern classics. But the Royal Spanish Academy has been trying to get people to feel more passionate, more excited, about this old book by using new technology. And what they're doing seems to be working, as the BBC's Nkem Ifejika reports: Extract 1: Nkem Ifejika, BBC reporter Byte size chunks for a sound bite culture - the novel was divided into 2,149 short passages. Any Spanish speaker can then pick a passage, record themselves reading it and upload to the internet. A quick search for video of Don Quixote shows they've already done so; the novel being read aloud by people across the globe - the exact manner in which young servants used to read it when it was written, never all at once. Alice: So the novel was divided up into 2,149 short passages or sections – what Nkem Ifejika describes as 'bite size chunks for a sound bite culture'. Yvonne, can you help us out with that phrase, please? Yvonne: I'll try, Alice. Now, lots of people can't or don't like to concentrate – or focus on one thing for a long period of time, so they're happier with things they can do quickly – with 'bite size chunks' of information, for example. Alice: And what would you say is 'a sound bite culture'? Yvonne: Well, lots of us like to listen to a short piece about something rather than read about it, so we're 'a sound bite culture'. For example, we seem to enjoy short, snappy advertisements that get messages across really quickly. Alice: Yes - and more and more people on trains are listening to a chapter of a book on their iPods rather than reading it. As we heard, it's all about 'bite size chunks for a sound bite culture!' Yvonne: It certainly is! Alice: Now the Royal Spanish Academy is asking people to read passages of Don Quixote out loud, just as people used to when the book was first written in the 1600s. People never read the entire book all at once. Yvonne: And most people don't do that today either. Alice: No, they don't - but Spanish speakers from all over the world are recording...