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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Christmas. A family gathered around the Christmas tree, showing how much they love each other, through the presents they give. Or... a ruthless1 battle for relationship control.
In Christmas-celebrating nations, millions of pounds a year are spent on corporate2 Christmas gifts. Companies want to strengthen the relationship they have with other businesses or with customers, and gifts create a feeling of obligation3, which ties them together for the rest of the year.
Corporate giving is also a form of 'impression management', where organizations try to control the image clients4 and business partners have of them, through their choice of gift.
Giving presents is also about showing you care, and that you know and understand someone. That's true in the home, which is one reason why choosing the perfect gift is so hard. And it's true in business as well. Companies use their corporate Christmas gifts to show they value their relationship with customers and partners.
But it's not all good. Gift giving can also make us feel insecure or cause bad feeling. Will we give too little, and receive something better in return? That could make us embarrassed or ashamed. Or will we give too much, and make the receiver of our gifts feel bad?
Sociologists and anthropologists have studied gift exchange for many years. Marcel Mauss was a famous sociologist5, who, in the 1920s, studied a type of gift-giving festival among indigenous6 people in North America, called a potlatch. He found that the people at a potlatch try to 'outgive' each other, with more and more lavish7 presents, until eventually some people can't compete and give up. They lose face, and are left feeling subordinated8 to the gift-giver who 'won' the exchange.
At home and in business, the effects of the presents we choose this Christmas will last the whole year round.
Quiz 测验
1. Who do businesses give Christmas gifts to?
Clients/customers and partners.
2. Which words mean trying to control the image which people have of your company?
Impression management.
3. Where do potlatches take place?
North America.
4. Who loses face at a potlatch?
The people who can't compete/who give up.
5. Is the following statement true, false or not given? Companies spend £5 million on corporate gifts each Christmas.
That's not given. We only know companies spend millions of pounds.
Glossary 词汇表
gathered around 聚集在(周围)
ruthless battle for 一场残酷的搏斗
corporate 公司(的)
gifts 礼物
obligation 责任
impression management 印象管理
showing you care 显示你关心(他人)
value 珍视,器重
insecure 没有安全感的
bad feeling 感觉不好
in return (礼尚)往来,作为回报
ashamed (被)羞辱的
sociologists 社会学家
anthropologists 人类学家
gift exchange 礼物交换
indigenous people 土著民
outgive each other 出手要胜对方一筹
lavish 挥霍的
can't compete 无法竞争
lose face 丢脸
subordinated to 从属于,服从于
1 ruthless | |
adj.无情的,冷酷的,残忍的,坚决彻底的 | |
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2 corporate | |
adj.共同的,全体的;公司的,企业的 | |
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3 obligation | |
n.(法律、道德上的)义务,责任 | |
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4 clients | |
n.顾客( client的名词复数 );当事人;诉讼委托人;[计算机]客户端 | |
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5 sociologist | |
n.研究社会学的人,社会学家 | |
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6 indigenous | |
adj.土产的,土生土长的,本地的 | |
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7 lavish | |
adj.无节制的;浪费的;vt.慷慨地给予,挥霍 | |
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8 subordinated | |
从属( subordinate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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