Shadowing-Übung: In 'The Emperor of Gladness,' Ocean Vuong explores chosen family and acts of kindness - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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He's a writer who draws deeply from personal experience to explore the wider story of working class life in America.
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He's a writer who draws deeply from personal experience to explore the wider story of working class life in America.
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In his latest novel, just released, Ushun Vuong blends grief, healing, and resilience into a powerful and poetic narrative.
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Senior arts correspondent Jeffrey Brown sits down with him for our arts and culture series, Canvas.
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There's just something connected to the brain with the way the hand moves.
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He writes by hand.
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OCEAN VONG, When you're writing by hand, every sentence takes about 10, 15 seconds longer.
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JEFFREY BROWN, Author, The Emperor of Gladness, Types drafts on a vintage typewriter.
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In an age of instant output, poet and novelist Ocean Vuong takes the long way in.
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His latest novel, The Emperor of Gladness, is a meditation on pain, unexpected acts of kindness, and a reckoning with the history that shaped him personally.
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OCEAN VONG, I have always been fixated on kindness without power.
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There's so many people in America who don't have the means to alter each other's lives,
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the communities that I grew up with, working-class, poor folks, who don't have money or positions or means to rescue each other.
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And yet I have watched people still commit themselves to kindness, even though they know it won't change anything.
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JEFFREY BROWN, An immigrant from Vietnam, Vuong, now 36, spent most of his childhood in a working-class community in Hartford, Connecticut,
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much like the one where he set his novel, a fictional New England town called Gladness, where his young protagonist, like Vuong himself, is shaped by a post-industrial landscape after the 2008 financial meltdown and the ongoing opioid crisis.
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VONG, I saw the opioid epidemic before it was this convenient term used by politicians.
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I saw lunch ladies overdose overnight, teachers, your friend's mom,
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everyday Americans who lost themselves to this drug so quickly as kind of this pharmaceutical slaughter, wherein they were so ashamed of it.
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JEFFREY BROWN, Ph.D.: Vuong also tapped into another aspect of Americana he himself experienced working in fast-food restaurants, for him part of the illusion of the American dream, one offering a different kind of family.
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MARGARET WARNER, The fast-food restaurant is all about deception.
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We truly didn't cook anything.
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We were one giant microwave.
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But we presented our food as if it was home-cooked.
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It was made by some grandmother in the back, like, you know.
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And so there was...
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JEFFREY BROWN, The myth of it.
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MARGARET WARNER, The fast food, but it was made by grandma in the back.
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MARGARET WARNER, It's like impossible, right?
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A lot of this country is founded on the nuclear family.
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And one alternative to that, you can say, is the found family, chosen family.
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But there's a huge sector I think I wanted to tap into, which is the circumstantial family, the family at work, the family cobbled arbitrarily together during a shift.
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And there's an intimacy and bond and kinship there that actually corrodes ideology.
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We all had different politics.
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We came from different parts of life.
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JEFFREY BROWN, The New York Times, The New York Times, The New York Times, The New York Times, Where we all come from and how we got here is a longtime obsession of Wong's, a subject of his poetry in two volumes, Night Sky with Exit Wounds and Time as a Mother, and an earlier novel On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous.
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He's often tackling the feeling of being an outsider, queer, an immigrant, and, as he puts it, caught in tragic history, descended from an American grandfather who served in the Vietnam War and a Vietnamese
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BROWN, How much of that past history still lives on and kind of finds itself even into a story of your, of a young man living in Hartford, Connecticut?
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DR. HENRY HENRY, History doesn't leave us.
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I think history is something that we pass through.
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through, and it's almost like this web you pass through, like a spider's web.
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You pass through a spider's web, and it clings to you.
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I have been caught by history.
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I have also been made by history.
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I joke, and I say suffering is diverse in this one, many lineages of trouble.
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JEFFREY BROWN, But sometimes you bring it to the surface in different ways, right?
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Yes, because I think we don't get to choose how we get a life.
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And we don't get to choose whether we're victims or not.
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But we do get to choose whether we live in victimhood.
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And I think, for me, being a writer, creating stories is my way of saying I'm not marked by my history.
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But also, there is no solution to my history.
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There's no easy way to say that the Vietnam War cost millions of Vietnamese lives, thousands of American soldiers who did not want to fight in this war, drafted against their will.
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And yet I owe my life to such a black page in history.
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JEFFREY BROWN, A rich history and a literary voice that has resonated with students.
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He's a professor at NYU and with many readers, especially in this moment.
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While Vong didn't set out to become a public voice, he finds himself settling into that role.
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You are representing people, and you are speaking for people, whether you like it or not.
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VONG VONG, You are representing people, and you are speaking for people, whether you like it or not.
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VONG VONG, You are representing people, and you are speaking for people, whether you like it or not.
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VONG VONG VONG, You have to now put more care and concern into the words.
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And then I thought, oh, but that's what I've been doing anyway as a writer, care and concern.
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I mean, who wakes up and decides to maneuver one of the smallest, fragile mediums in our species as letters around the smallest, fragile forms of a poem?
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Who does that without care?
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is an act of care.
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JEFFREY BROWN, The desire underneath all this that brings everything together is a central question in my life,
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trying to understand why there is so much suffering in our life as people.
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And yet, why is there so much beauty?
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Why do we suffer so much?
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yet have the capacity to recognize with absolute mystery and wonder the beauty of the world, I don't know the answer, but I'm always writing towards that and figuring that out.
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JEFFREY BROWN, For the PBS NewsHour, I'm Jeffrey Brown in New York.
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Thank you.

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Warum das Sprechen mit diesem Video üben?

Das Üben des Sprechens mit Videos wie diesem von Ocean Vuong ist eine hervorragende Möglichkeit, das Englisch sprechen üben zu verbessern. Vuong nutzt eine poetische und zugleich unkomplizierte Sprache, die es Lernenden ermöglicht, sich mit den Themen des Alltags zu verbinden. Die Erzählweise behandelt nicht nur persönliche Erfahrungen, sondern auch gesellschaftliche Themen, die viele Menschen ansprechen. Indem du den Dialog nachsprichst und die emotionale Tiefe der Inhalte nachahmst, stärkst du dein shadow speak und gewinnst Sicherheit im Gespräche führen. Diese Übung fördert auch dein Verständnis für Nuancen in der Sprache, die per gesprochenem Wort übermittelt werden.

Grammatik & Ausdrücke im Kontext

  • „I have always been fixated on kindness without power.“ – Dieser Satz zeigt die Verwendung von present perfect, um eine anhaltende Beziehung zwischen Vergangenheit und Gegenwart auszudrücken. Es ist wichtig, diese Struktur zu beherrschen, um andauernde Gefühle oder Zustände zu beschreiben.
  • „There are so many people in America who don’t have the means to alter each other's lives.“ – Hier wird das Modalverb „can“ im Negativ verwendet, um Einschränkungen auszudrücken. Diese Struktur ist im Alltag wichtig, um die Möglichkeiten oder Unmöglichkeiten auszudrücken, was das shadowspeak bereichert.
  • „I think history is something that we pass through.“ – Das Present Simple wird benutzt, um allgemeine Wahrheiten auszudrücken. Dies stärkt dein Gedächtnis für wiederkehrende Strukturen in der englischen Sprache.

Häufige Aussprachefallen

In Vuongs Vortrag gibt es einige Wörter und Phrasen, die für Lernende eine Herausforderung darstellen können. Achte auf die Aussprache von „kindness“, wo das „d“ oft überhört wird und die Silben verwischt klingen können. Auch die Wörter „hospital“ und „epidemic“ sind knifflig, da sie oft schnell und in einem Fluss ausgesprochen werden. Es ist sinnvoll, diese Begriffe mehrmals laut nachzusprechen, um ein sicheres Gefühl für ihre akkurate Aussprache zu entwickeln. Das Ziel ist es, deinen shadow speech so flüssig und verständlich wie möglich zu gestalten, damit du im Alltag sicherer kommunizieren kannst.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

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