21 mai 2020 · The soothing ['suːðɪŋ] power of books Neil: Hello This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English I'm Neil Georgina: And I'm Georgina
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http://yvonpinault.eklablog.fr 21 - The soothing power of books 21 May 2020 bbclearningenglish.com 6 Minute English 1 The soothing ১ࢵŬ power of books Neil
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning
English. I'm Neil.
Georgina: And I'm Georgina.
Neil What type of books do you like to read, Georgina?Georgina: I love reading crime fiction - you know
detective stories by authors like Ruth Rendell orAgatha
ӂLJӂ Christie.
NeilReally? Do you find them relaxing?
Georgina: I wouldn't say relaxing exactly, but I get really involved in the story - trying to work out who the murderer is... then finding out on the last page. NeilThat's
interesting because today we'll be looking at how books can help us relax and feel more alive during troubled times. We'll be finding out how reading is one of the best ways to find relief from the pre ssures of modern life. Georgina: Neil, are you talking about 'Bibliotherapy' ࢵࢵӂࣕLJࢦӂ? NeilAmazing detective skills, Georgina! Exactly.
'Bibliotherapy' is the prescription of books as a re medy to sickness. It has been around since 2013, when the UK charity 'Reading Agency' published a list of books that doctors could offer to patients, tackling topic s from depression to dementia [ࢵ࣎ӂ to chronic pain. Georgina: Since then, 1.2 million readers have borrowed the scheme's ১ books from libraries ['laࢵbrӂriz].It's so
successful that it's about to be extended to chil dren as well. Neil I wonder which books have been most popular over that time? In fact that's my quiz question for today. What is the best-selling book of all time? Is it: a) Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone by J K Rowling, b) A Tale of TwoCities by Charles Dickens, or c) Don
Quixote
ࢵӂࣕࢵ by Miguel de Cervantes?Georgina: I'll say a) Harry Potter.
Neil OK. Well, we'll find out later if you're right. In 'Bibliotherapy', people meet up to read together. Professor Philip Davis, who runs these reading groups, belie v es they help the participants ࢝১ࢵࢵӂ 'come more alive'. Here he is speaking to BBC Radio 4'sYou and Yours about what he's discovered.
Philip Davis: Above all, that it's not to do with scanning, with quick reading, when they"re reading literature. If they're just scanning, if you're just looking for information, you go fast, it's very easy, it's au tomatic but when literature begins to do something more complicated than that in an area that emotionally you care about.The brain
be gins to work from different parts, from a different hemisphere ࢦࢵࢵӂ and it gets excited, it gets pre-emotional - you can see the brain coming to life and it's that life that is important in terms of these reading groups.Georgina: One
type of reading is scanning - reading quick ly in order to find specific information or skimming the page to get a general understanding. Neil But the real therapy happens when a group reads li terature - written works such as novels, poems or plays which are thought to have artistic merit. When group members read literature their brains get excited and start working from a different hemisphere - a word meaning 'half a sphere' usually half the Earth or in this case, the human brain. Le pouvoir apaisant des livres Neil : Bonjour. Voici 6 minutes d'anglais de BBC LearningEnglish. Je m'appelle Neil.
Georgina : Et moi Georgina.
Neil : Quel genre de livres aimez-vous lire, Georgina ? Georgina : J'adore lire des romans policiers, vous savez, des enquêtes policières (romans policiers) d'auteurs comme RuthRendell ou Agatha Christie.
Neil : Vraiment ? Les trouvez-vous relaxants ? Georgina : Je ne dirais pas précisément relaxants, mais je m'implique vraiment dans l'histoire, essayant de démêler (découvrir) qui est le meurtrier... puis le découvrant à la dernière page. Neil : C'est intéressant parce qu'aujourd'hui, nous verrons comment les livres peuvent nous aider à nous détendre et à être plus en forme (avoir la pêche) dans des moments difficiles (en période de turbulences). Nous découvrirons en quoi la lecture est l'un des meilleurs moyens de trouver un soulagement aux pressions de la vie moderne. Georgina : Neil, parlez-vous de 'Bibliothérapie' ? Neil : Quelles compétences de détective incroyables, Georgina ! Exactement. La "bibliothérapie" est la prescription de livres comme remède à la maladie. Elle existe depuis 2013, lorsque l'organisation caritative britannique "Reading Agency" a publié une liste de livres que les médecins pouvaient offrir aux patients, abordant (s'attaquant à) des sujets allant de la dépression à la démence en passant par la douleur chronique. Georgina : Depuis lors, 1,2 million de lecteurs ont emprunté les livres du projet (programme) aux bibliothèques. Il a tellement de succès qu'il est également sur le point d'êtreétendu aux enfants.
Neil : Je me demande quels livres ont été les plus populaires au cours de cette période ? En fait, c'est ma question quiz pour aujourd'hui. Quel est le livre le plus vendu de tous les temps ? Est-ce : a) Harry Potter et la pierre philosophale de JK Rowling, b)Un conte de deux villes de Charles
Dickens, ou c)
Don Quichotte de Miguel de Cervantes ?
Georgina : Je dirai a) Harry Potter. Neil : D'accord. Eh bien, nous découvrirons plus tard si vous avez
raison. Avec la "Bibliothérapie", les gens se rencontrent pour lire ensemble. Le professeur Philip Davis, qui s'occupe de ces groupes de lecture, pense qu'ils aident les participants à "se requinquer (reprendre du poil de la bête)". Ici, il parle [dans l'émission] You and Yours de BBC Radio 4 de ce qu'il a découvert.