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IELTS Tips - The Reading Tips – Issue 4

The texts used in the test come from magazines, books and journals, and are written for the non-specialist reader. They become progressively more difficult.

IELTS exam tasks: Summary Completion and Short Answer questions

For both of these task types, you have to select actual words from the article. In the summary completion, you have to complete sentences which re-word a section of the article. For short answer questions, you have to give details about a section of the article. Both task types test your ability to skim through the article and find the relevant section, and then scan that section for the relevant details.

IELTS exam tips:

  1. Skim read the article for one or two minutes only, to understand the main topic and how the text is organised.
  2. Read the question or summary. Think about what kind of information you need, e.g. a person’s name, a number, a noun.
  3. Locate the relevant section of the main article.
  4. Scan the relevant section for keywords.
  5. Re-read the question and the section of text to double-check that the information is an exact match.

Guevara children denounce Che branding

The Guardian

The scraggly beard, the beret adorned with a star, the intense gaze: it is an instantly recognisable image which has been used to sell everything from booze to T-shirts to mugs to bikinis.

Che Guevara is an icon of the 20th century whose brand has turned into a worldwide marketing phenomenon. If you want to shift more products or give your corporate image a bit of edge, the Argentine revolutionary's face and name are there to be used, like commercial gold dust.

The fact that Guevara was a communist guerrilla and Marxist ideologue is an irony of little interest to his capitalist exploiters. It has, however, become a problem for his children.

Aleida Guevara this week denounced the commercialisation of her father's image as an affront to his socialist ideals. "Something that bothers me now is the appropriation of the figure of Che that has been used to make enemies from different classes. It's embarrassing."

A man who fought and died trying to overthrow capitalism and material excess should not be used to sell British vodka, French fizzy drinks and Swiss mobile phones, among other travesties, she said. "We don't want money, we demand respect."

Aleida, 47, the eldest of Guevara's four children by his second wife, made the comments during an internet forum sponsored by Cuba's government ahead of what would have been her father's 80th birthday on June 14.

The complaint came amid a surge of renewed interest in Guevara. The actor Benicio del Toro won best actor at the Cannes Film Festival this month for his portrayal in Steven Soderbergh's four and a half hour epic Che. Camilo Guevara, a son, who participated in the forum, said he welcomed the film as long as it was faithful to his father's memory.

Last month Buenos Aires unveiled a towering bronze statute of the young doctor who left Argentina on a motorbike in 1953 and became radicalised by oppression and poverty in Latin America. He joined Fidel Castro's guerrilla campaign against Cuba's dictator, Fulgencio Batista, and became a key figure in the revolution before unsuccessfully attempting to export insurrection to Congo and Bolivia, where he was captured and executed by CIA-backed government troops in 1967.

Guevara was a more doctrinaire ideologue than Castro and a fervent critic of "material incentives" but in death he became transformed into an icon of daring and rebellion.

The famous image portrait was based on an image taken by the Cuban photographer Alberto Korda in Havana in 1960. It was pinned to his studio wall for seven years until the Italian publisher Giangiacomo Feltrinelli mass produced it around the time of Guevara's death.

Korda willingly forfeited royalties but he sued a British advertising agency for using the photo to promote vodka.

Cuba's government has used the image to promote its revolution and to rake in tourist dollars through state-run stores which sell Che paraphernalia.

Questions 1-5: Summary completion

Complete the following sentences WITH NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage.

Che's image has been widely used in advertising because it is (1) _______.

The growth of Che's (2) _________ has become an international phenomenon.

Companies have been free to use his (3) ________ and  _________ .

Che's political position is of (4) ___________ to companies using his image.

Che's children now think that the difference between his political position and the exploitation of his image is a (5) __________

Questions 6-10: Short answer questions

Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the text for each answer.

6.What does Che’s daughter demand?

7.How old would Che have been this year?

8.Which two countries did Che try to export his ideas to without success?

9.How long did Che’s photo remain unused for?

10.Che’s photographer took legal action when the photograph was used to sell which product?

Key vocab.

Booze:You can buy all sorts of booze in convenience stores, from vodka to red wine.

Icon:Paris Hilton is apparently one of the world’s most recognizable fashion icons, but no one really seems to know what it is she actually does.

Capitalist:China’s government is called communist, although they have adopted many capitalist ideas.

Poverty:Taiwanese volunteers now work overseas to help reduce poverty in third-world countries.

Royalties:Musicians lose out on all their royalties when people illegally download their work.

Answers

  1. instantly recognizable
  2. brand
  3. face, name
  4. little interest
  5. problem
  6. Respect
  7. 80
  8. Congo and Bolivia
  9. Seven years
  10. Vodka

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