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        Being somewhere else

        Reading and Use of English | 1BSU

        1  Before starting Reading and Use of English Part 5,
          do the exercise in the Exam round-up box.                  Disappearing

        Exam round-up                                                into
         Say if the following statements are true (T) or false (F). If a
         statement is false, rewrite it to make it true.             Africa
         In Reading and Use of English Part 5
                                                                     I wanted the pleasure of being in Africa again. Feeling
            there are six questions and you have to choose the
                                                                     that the place was so large it contained many untold
           best option: A, B, C or D
                                                                     tales and some hope and comedy and sweetness too,
            you should read the questions before reading the text
                                                                     I aimed to reinsert myself in the bundu, as we used to
            the questions are answered in random order in the        call the bush, and to wander the antique hinterland.
           text                                                      There I had lived and worked, happily, almost forty years
            you should read the options after reading the section    ago, in the heart of the greenest continent.
           of text that is relevant to each question.
                                                                     In those old undramatic days of my school teaching in
        2  Work in pairs. You will read an extract from a book       the bundu, folks lived their lives on bush paths at the
          by Paul Theroux about a journey he made through         10  end of unpaved roads of red clay, in villages of grass-
          Africa. Before you read, look at the photos here and       roofed huts. They had a new national fl ag, they had just
          on the next page.                                          gotten the vote, some had bikes, many talked about
                                                                     buying their fi rst pair of shoes. They were hopeful,
             Which aspects of your daily life and routine would you   and so was I, a schoolteacher living near a settlement
            like to escape from by making a journey?                 of mud huts among dusty trees and parched fi elds –
             What things do you think a man in his 60s would want    children shrieking at play; and women bent double –
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            to escape from? Why? Do you think they are the same      most with infants slung on their backs – hoeing the corn
            or different from the things young people want to        and beans; and the men sitting in the shade.
            escape from when they travel?
                                                                     The Swahili word safari means ‘journey’, it has nothing
        3  Read the text quickly. Why did the writer choose to    20  to do with animals, someone ‘on safari’ is just away
          travel in Africa again?                                    and unobtainable and out of touch. Out of touch in
                                                                     Africa was where I wanted to be. The wish to disappear
                                                                     sends many travellers away. If you are thoroughly sick of
                                                                     being kept waiting at home or at work, travel is perfect:
                                                                     let other people wait for a change. Travel is a sort of
                                                                     revenge for having been put on hold, or having to leave
                                                                     messages on answering machines, not knowing your
                                                                     party’s extension, being kept waiting all your working life
                                                                     – the homebound writer’s irritants. But also being kept
                                                                  30  waiting is the human condition.

                                                                     Travel in the African bush can also be a sort of revenge
                                                                     on mobile phones and email, on telephones and the
                                                                     daily paper, on the creepier aspects of globalisation that
                                                                     allow anyone who chooses to get their insinuating hands
                                                                     on you. I desired to be unobtainable. I was going to
                                                                     Africa for the best of reasons – in a spirit of discovery;
                                                                     and for the pettiest – simply to disappear, to light out,
                                                                     with a suggestion of I dare you to try to fi nd me.







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