IELTS Listening: Short Answers: Cancel Culture

This is a news story about a growing trend in America. The original is over at VOA and can be found here.

Listen to the recording and answer the following questions using no more than TWO words.

  1. According to George Packer, where does cancel culture mainly occurs?
  2. Tressie McMillan Cottom says that what has been with us for ever?
  3. Besides in Twitter, online posts, and  books, where else can we find people expressing their anger against cancel culture?
  4. The Minneapolis businessman’s child posted what kind of message?
  5. The letter, signed by over 100 people, criticized what in people’s thinking?

Answers, transcript and clues below the image

  1. social media
  2. accountability
  3. opinion pieces
  4. offensive
  5. conformity

What Is Cancel Culture?

The term “cancel culture” is appearing in the news a lot lately.

But what exactly is “cancel culture?”

Here are some explanations, gathered by the Associated Press, from people who have been writing about the issue.

Writer and reporter George Packer has explained that it is an event where many voices, mostly on social media, try “to silence a point of view that they find offensive by trying to damage or destroy the reputation of the person who has given offense.”

Tressie McMillan Cottom has a different opinion. “I don’t think it’s real. But there are reasonable people who believe in it,” the writer and educator said. ”Accountability has always existed. But some people are being held accountable in ways that are new to them.”

It “[takes] away the ability of a person with whom you disagree to ever be taken seriously as a writer/editor/speaker/activist/intellectual, or… to be hired or employed,” says Letty Cottin Pogrebin. She is an activist and founding editor of Ms. magazine.

In tweets, online letters, opinion pieces and books, people from every political point of view are angry about what they consider a growing intolerance for other opinions. A Politico/Morning Consult public opinion study released last week shows 44 percent of Americans disapprove of it, 32 percent approve and the remaining 24 percent had no opinion or said they did not know what it was.

There are recent examples of unpopular “cancellations.” They include reports of what happened to the owner of several Minneapolis food stores. His business was threatened with boycotts after his daughter wrote words on social media that were offensive.

A data expert was fired by the company Civis Analytics after he tweeted a study finding that nonviolent protests increase support for Democratic candidates and violent protests decrease it. Civis Analytics has denied he was fired for the tweet.

These events “damage the lives of innocent people” and have little purpose, Yascha Mounk wrote in the magazine The Atlantic last month. Mounk has been criticized for saying that many educated, important people are saying it is acceptable to give up on values like due process and free speech.”

Discussions can be confusing however. Those who do not like intolerance can be unhappy with those who do not agree. A few weeks ago, more than 100 artists and thinkers signed a letter co-written by Packer and published by Harper’s. It warned against big thinking that weakens free and open discussion and demands conformity of thought.

The letter was signed by many people with different political ideas, from far-left Noam Chomsky to the conservative David Frum.

The writer and trans activist Jennifer Finney Boylan, who signed the letter, quickly disowned it because she “did not know who else” had signed their names. Salman Rushdie was one of the signers. In 1989, he was forced into hiding. Rushdie received death threats from Iranian Islamic leaders because he had written a novel called “The Satanic Verses.” Some online critics said the letter was from self-important people who knew nothing about censorship.

One of the organizers of the letter, the writer Thomas Chatterton Williams, later wrote about an incident on Twitter. He wrote that he had asked a guest to leave his home after an argument over Bari Weiss. Weiss is the former New York Times writer who quit over what she called political correctness at the newspaper.

“The only speech these powerful people seem to care about is their own,” the feminist writer Jessica Valente wrote about the Harper’s letter.

It “is certainly not about free speech…‘canceled’ is a label we all understand, a powerful person who’s been held to account,” she wrote.

Hard to define

However, “cancel culture” remains hard to define because it appears to have no limits. It has no single cause, ideology or punishment.

Movie producer Harvey Weinstein and actor Bill Cosby were convicted of sex crimes and are in prison. Actor Kevin Spacey was accused of sex crimes. He was not been convicted but has made no movies since he faced trial.

Others people are only “canceled” a little. Movie director Woody Allen was accused of sexual abuse by his daughter Dylan Farrow. His business deal with Amazon was cancelled. But, he continues to release movies internationally. He recently published a book about his life.

But what about politicians?

“Politicians can ride this out…if the public is willing to go along, then they can sometimes survive things perhaps they shouldn’t survive,” Packer says.

About Paul Davey

I’m Paul from Bristol, England. I am an IELTS tutor available for face-to-face classes in Taipei and Skype classes anywhere in the world. I'm based in Yonghe, New Taipei City — very close to Taipei. I have been teaching for many years and I am good at it. I’m patient and never tire of correcting students’ mistakes. I know many good ways for students to learn quickly and make a lot of progress in a short time. You won’t be wasting your money. I especially know the difficulties faced by Chinese speakers, and I know how to overcome these difficulties. IELTS is my primary concern and over the years I have taught hundreds of students in the UK, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other spots around the world. I know what the examiners look for and I know how to increase your band and get the grade you need to make your dream come true. I have been blogging about IELTS for about a decade. I started my first website in 2007, before beginning to blog at IELTS Tutor on the Hello UK website. Now I blog only at IELTS in Taiwan and Around the World. I majored in Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, UK, graduating with a bachelor’s degree (2/1 with honours). I obtained my language-teaching qualification in 2006, which is accredited by the Royal College of Teachers. Before I began teaching, I worked in a software company in the UK, writing and selling software solutions. After teaching for many years I took a five-year break to run my own retailing business. Following that adventure, I returned to full-time teaching. For the last 11 years, I’ve been in Taiwan, where in addition to my IELTS work, I have taught corporate classes at Taipei Bank, Pfizer, and Chinese Petroleum Corporation (CPC, Taiwan). I have interests in many fields including travel, literature, science and history.
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