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Sophie Boudjenane/Lycée Louis Bascan Rambouillet

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Terminale L/LVA: your magazine!

10décembre

Here is your magazine on the year 1962! well done!

Magazine créé avec Madmagz.

TL1 timelines

20novembre

Here are the online timelines that you did on Friday! Enjoy!

http://www.tiki-toki.com/timeline/entry/558772/the-Vietnam-War/

http://www.tiki-toki.com/timeline/entry/558780/Vietnam-War/

http://www.tiki-toki.com/timeline/entry/558769/Vietnam-War/

http://www.tiki-toki.com/timeline/entry/558783/The-Vietnam-War/




TL LVA.Pearl tree Piracy.

13octobre

On this Pearl tree, you will find most of the documents seen in class and your own productions.

Pirates in the Elizabethan period! par vroum

Word clouds: piracy

20septembre

Kennedy at a press conference 1962/script

14mai
President_Kennedy___s_press_conference_script.pdf

Margareth Thatcher's speech. Document bac LVA.

7mai

Margaret_Thatcher_speaking_about_the_miners_strike_on_it_25th_day.pdf

Build your vocabulary!

2mars

Follow the link to learn more about "light and darkness"

http://www.thesaurus.com/browse/dark


Dystopian movies, let's take a quiz!

12février

Follow the link, it will lead you to a fun quiz on dystopian movies.

http://www.funtrivia.com/playquiz/quiz34750127c8020.html

Utopia and Dystopia

2février

Introduction

You might have heard the terms utopia and dystopia before, but maybe you don't know what they mean. Luckily you've come to the right place! Here, we will will explore the concept of both utopias and dystopias, which are two types of worlds that are popular in speculative fiction or science fiction stories. In case you haven't heard the term speculative fiction, it is just a broad term that includes all science fiction, fantasy, horror, supernatural, apocalyptic, alternative history, or other type of fiction that is not strictly realistic.

Definitions

A utopia is a perfect world. In utopias, there are not problems like war, disease, poverty, oppression, discrimination, inequality, and so forth. The word utopia is made-up from Greek roots by Sir Thomas More. In 1516, More wrote a book called Utopia. Depending on the Greek roots used, utopia can either mean 'no place' or 'good place.'

A dystopia, on the other hand, is a world in which nothing is perfect. The problems that plague our world are often even more extreme in dystopias. Dystopia is a play on the made-up word 'utopia' using the root dys, which means 'bad' or 'difficult.' Words like 'dysfunctional' or 'dyslexia' illustrate the use of this prefix.

Characteristics

Utopias

New Harmony By F. Bate, 1838 Example Of A Utopia
Depiction Of A Utopia From By F. Bate
  • peaceful government
  • equality for citizens
  • access to education, healthcare, employment, and so forth
  • a safe environment

Dystopias

  • usually a controlling, oppressive government or no government
  • either extreme poverty for everyone or a huge income gap between the richest characters and the poorest characters
  • propaganda controlling people's minds
  • freethinking and independent thought is banned

Examples

As you probably guessed, examples of dystopias are much more common. After all, if fiction writers could devise solutions to our world's biggest problems, such as world hunger, poverty, and war, then we would probably have implemented them and be currently living in a utopia! Another reason dystopias are more popular with writers is because they are, by their very nature, full of conflict, an integral part of any engaging story.

Dystopias

Recent example of dystopias include The Hunger Games, written by Suzanne Collins in 2008, which is about a lottery in which children are picked to fight to the death, and Divergent, a 2011 novel (adapted into a film in 2014) about a society split into five factions based on five different personality characteristics as a method to retain control over human nature. As you can no doubt tell, dystopian stories have found an increased popularity in the young adult genre of literature.

There are many classic examples of dystopian stories, including Aldous Huxley's Brave New World and Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange. However, probably the most well-known example of classic dystopian literature is 1984 by George Orwell, written in 1949. It's an example of a dystopia in which British society, over time, became warped and transformed into an extreme totalitarian state. In addition to controlling the press, the food, and relationships of the state's inhabitants, the manipulation and control of human thought itself is the goal of this regime. If you've ever heard a political pundit or other writer use the term 'thoughtcrime', 'doublethink', or 'Big Brother', you're hearing terms from 1984.

Utopias

In utopias, the biggest issues that case conflict have been solved: there is no longer war, illness, poverty, or inequality. Sometimes a more enlightened group helps guide our society to a better world, such as in Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke (1954), where a group of aliens use their advanced technology and ideologies to help humans create a better society.

from: education-portal.com

Artstep!

21janvier

Follow the exhibition created by Quentin and Olivia!Click on the following link!