The US as a global power, second part of the power point
15 avril 2016
The US as a global power - part 2
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 15 avril 2016, 22:08
The US as a global power - part 1
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 15 avril 2016, 21:49
The US as a global power, first part of the power point
12 janvier 2016
WWI Memories - Colleville-sur-mer
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 12 janvier 2016, 14:14
The American Cemetery is located in
Colleville-Sur-Mer, in Normandy, in France. It is composed of a large lawn with
burials, a memorial, a chapel and a Museum. The whole site was designed by the
H2L2 architectural firm and Markley Stevenson for landscaping. . It covers 172
acres (70 hectares). It was inaugurated in 1956.
This Cemetery is linked with the popular memory, which goes that all the soldiers of the Cemetery who were killed during D-Day. But it is also a great symbol for the US. The Challenge for the Cemetery nowadays is to keep conveying the events to the next generations. It was estimated that the 70th Anniversary of the D-Day in 2014 was the last great event in the Cemetery, with witnesses of the event.
Léandre, Manon
WWII Memories - Maus
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 12 janvier 2016, 14:07
Maus, Art Spiegelman, 1991
Maus is a comic made by Art Spiegelman. Art Spiegelman is an American author and illustrator born in 1948 in Stockholm (he immigrated in the USA in 1951). His parents were Jewish Polish and Auschwitz survivors. This fact had a real impact on him. Notably because of his mother’s depression, he went to a psychiatric hospital in 1968. Soon after he came out, his mother Anja committed suicide. He felt guilty, so to not relapse into psychiatric problems, he worked a lot, writing and drawing a lot of stories about the WWII published in newspapers, and in 1991 he decided to write an entire comic, thanks to his father’s memories: Maus (the German word for mouse).
This comic was written in 1991. The characters are different animals: Jews are represented by mice, and Nazis are represented by cats. The author chose these animals because cats always want to catch mice. There are other characters: the Polish (not Jewish) are pigs (the author wanted a pejorative image because they were persecuted by the Nazis), the Americans are dogs (because they are seen as protectors), the French are frogs (because of the cliché about the French who eat frogs), the Swedish are elks, the British are fishes (because of the fish and chips) and the babies who have a Jewish parent and a German parent are mice with cat stripes. For this comic, Art Spiegelman asked his father Vladek to tell him his life during the WWII and his mother’s life Anja (who committed suicide four years before). He included some of these dialogs with his father in his comic. So he tells the invasion of Nazis in the city where they lived (in Poland), the life with the Jewish yellow star, how he became Germans’ prisoner and release, their decision to send their first son Richieu in a ghetto for more security (but he died when the ghetto was destroyed), their deportation in Auschwitz concentration camp where they had to work very hard in bad conditions, their release with the arrival of the Allied forces (here the American), how they flee in Sweden, where Art Spiegelman was born. Art Spiegelman wrote this comic in USA thanks to his father’s interviews but he also returned in Poland to see the places his father talked about and document himself about the WWII.
This comic has a historical accuracy because it tells the history of a real Auschwitz survivor. It is written at the first singular person because the author’s father tells his souvenirs and his memories of the war. Moreover, it was very difficult and painful for his father to remember all these horrible souvenirs, the death of many of his friends and his first son.
Maus had been greeted with success by people and critics. Indeed it received several literary awards, like the Pulitzer award in 1992, and many TV documentaries and exhibitions are made about his comic. There are a lot of books who tell the Shoah, but this one had a real success because it is about a real testimony and it is a comic with animals, so it is easier to read.
This comic is recent (1991) so it has a back from the facts. The memory of the Shoah were suppressed and forgotten during many years after the war, so Art Spiegelman puts in light this horrible but important part of the WWII. It permits to witnesses like his father to express themselves, to tell their hidden history. When people read it, it is like they returned in the past during the war thanks to the drawings, so they remember or they discover the horror of the war and its consequences on survivors’ lives. It is an homage for the author’s parents: it is dedicated to his mother Anja. But it is also an homage for all the people who were prisoners during the war, in concentration camps. This comic reminds the horror of the WWII, and the fact that people who survive are shocked for all their life. It takes an important part of the WWII and the Shoah memory.
So Maus is a comic which tells well the WWII and these memories. The author gives a very important place to his parents (they are main characters) and in the final vignette we can see his parents grave, so he honours them in his book.
Marie, Océane
16 octobre 2015
Mapping migratory movements in the UK - 3B The integration of foreigners in the UK
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 16 octobre 2015, 14:45
15 octobre 2015
Mapping migratory movements in the UK - 3A The UK in the system of world mobility
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 15 octobre 2015, 12:36
The organization of space in the UK - 2C Explaining the North-South divide
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 15 octobre 2015, 12:25
The organization of space in the UK - 2B Mapping the North-South divide
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 15 octobre 2015, 12:17
The organization of space in the UK - 2A Mapping the population distribution
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 15 octobre 2015, 12:15
14 octobre 2015
Mapping the UK - 1B The relations between the UK and the rest of the world
Par Julie Richard (Lycée Galilée, Cergy (95)) le 14 octobre 2015, 18:45
Mapping the relations between the UK and the rest of the world
Is the UK still a global political power?
British Empire in 1886
Map highlighting the member states of the Commonwealth (dark blue)
Is the UK a global military power?
worksheet_3_-_mapping_the_UK_team_B.docx
Is the UK a global power?
worksheet_3_-_mapping_the_UK_team_C.docx
Is the UK an "island" or a crossroads"?
worksheet_3_-_mapping_the_UK_team_D.docx
Is the UK a global commercial power?
worksheet_3_-_mapping_the_UK_team_E.docx
Is the UK a leading European power?
worksheet_3_-_mapping_the_UK_team_F.docx
Is the UK a global influential power?
Is the UK a global cultural power?
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