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Level 3 English – Thoughtcrime

"To the future or to the past, to a time when thought is free...to a time when truth exists, and what is done cannot be undone...From the age of uniformity, from the age of solitude, from the age of Big Brother, from the age of doublethink--greetings!

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A Clockwork Orange Advice to Youth Analysis A Postcard from Russia Clive James Critical Response DoubleThink Dystopia Examinations Figurative Elements of Satire Frankie Boyle Further Reading Future Dystopia Genre Features Genre Study George Orwell Grammar for Writing Grammar of Satire Historical Context Homework Language Literary Criticism Literature Logical Fallacies Mark Twain Marx Marxism Minority Report Newspeak Nineteen Eighty-Four Novel Novel Study Orwell Podcast Practice Propaganda Quotations Satire Significant Connections Surveillance Theory Understatement Writing Writing Portfolio Writing Task

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Thoughtcrime Podcast

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Course Content

Choosing Thoughtcrime as your English programme for Level 3 means that, you probably find the darker, more dystopian aspects of world literature attractive; you’re somehow inexorably drawn to the unusual and deep down you sense that something is rotten in the state of… This programme will take a media-savvy journalistic approach. You’ll need to think fast, question everything and be willing to speak up. You will be asked to challenge yourself, take risks and show ambition. 

We’ll be reading the work of some of the 20th Century’s greatest satirists, poets and activists. We’ll explore modern text communication, political and online language and compare this with our own speech to learn how the wool can be so easily pulled over our eyes. We’ll look at the grammar and style of a range of journalistic writing and publish our own. We’ll explore how our very language itself can control our thoughts and – if we’re not careful – limit our freedom. We’ll read one of the 20th Centuries most disturbing political novels, George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty Four and explore modern anti-heroes such as Donnie Darko and A Clockwork Orange’s Alex De Large. Throughout, you will be practising the key skills required to succeed in your NCEA programme.

In parallel to this everyone will be completing for homework their own longitudinal genre inquiry by investigating links between self-selected books, films and art and presenting these in documentary form.

Political language. . . is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.

GEORGE ORWELL

Thoughtcrime Podcast

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3.1 Novel Study 3.2 Film Study 3.3 Unfamiliar Texts 3.4 Writing Portfolio 3.5 Propaganda Speech 3.7 Significant Connections Course Documents Daily Lesson Outline Dystopian Fiction Examinations Grammar for Writing Practise Papers Reading Satire Speaking Viewing Writing
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Nuclear Weapons are Morally Indefensible – David Lange at the Oxford Union

Nuclear Weapons are Morally Indefensible – David Lange at the Oxford Union

3.5 Propaganda Speech, Speaking

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A Clockwork Orange Advice to Youth Analysis A Postcard from Russia Clive James Critical Response DoubleThink Dystopia Examinations Figurative Elements of Satire Frankie Boyle Further Reading Future Dystopia Genre Features Genre Study George Orwell Grammar for Writing Grammar of Satire Historical Context Homework Language Literary Criticism Literature Logical Fallacies Mark Twain Marx Marxism Minority Report Newspeak Nineteen Eighty-Four Novel Novel Study Orwell Podcast Practice Propaganda Quotations Satire Significant Connections Surveillance Theory Understatement Writing Writing Portfolio Writing Task

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"To the future or to the past, to a time when thought is free...to a time when truth exists, and what is done cannot be undone...From the age of uniformity, from the age of solitude, from the age of Big Brother, from the age of doublethink--greetings!
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Don’t you see that the whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the range of thought? In the end we shall make thoughtcrime literally impossible, because there will be no words in which to express it.
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Created by Christopher Waugh