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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

Thoughtcrime Podcast

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Abigail’s Practice Exam Response – 3.1 Written Texts

Abigail’s Practice Exam Response – 3.1 Written Texts

Oct 29, 2020 | 3.1 Novel Study, Examinations, Practise Papers, Reading

Nineteen Eighty-Four Type Up - Mock Exam 2020 Statement #4: The most significant texts are cautionary tales “The best books are those that tell us what we already know.” Written by George Orwell in his dystopia Nineteen Eighty-Four, this idea of literature presenting...

Radiohead: Idioteque, 2+2=5, Electioneering, Fake Plastic Trees and Planet Telex

Radiohead: Idioteque, 2+2=5, Electioneering, Fake Plastic Trees and Planet Telex

Sep 17, 2020 | 3.7 Significant Connections, Dystopian Fiction, Reading, Satire

Fake Plastic Trees: A green plastic watering canFor a fake Chinese rubber plantIn the fake plastic earth That she bought from a rubber manIn a town full of rubber plansTo get rid of itself   It wears her outIt wears her outIt wears her outIt wears her out  ...

Practise Paper: 3.1 Extended Written Text – Nineteen Eighty Four

Practise Paper: 3.1 Extended Written Text – Nineteen Eighty Four

Sep 7, 2020 | 3.1 Novel Study, Examinations, Practise Papers, Reading

91472 Respond critically to speci ed aspect(s) of studied written text(s), supported by evidence. 4 Credits. External

Practice Analysis – Sample Response – 3.1 Extended Written Texts

Practice Analysis – Sample Response – 3.1 Extended Written Texts

Sep 6, 2020 | 3.1 Novel Study, 3.2 Film Study, 3.7 Significant Connections, Examinations, Reading, Viewing

Good literature enlightens; great literature inspires action Some may believe that literature's role is largely archival, that it simply records moments of human endeavour and imagination, thereby making the great literary canon simply a vault, into which we place the...

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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
COURSE DOCUMENTS
Thoughtcrime: Course Outline

Thoughtcrime: Course Outline

Course Documents

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…

PODCASTS

Podcast: Postcard from Russia

Podcast: Postcard from Russia

Satire

Here are the website posts mentioned in this week's podcast: Grammar of Satire – A Postcard from Russia Grammar of Satire – Trident, by Frankie Boyle Grammar of Satire – Writing Task

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Abigail’s Practice Exam Response – 3.1 Written Texts

Abigail’s Practice Exam Response – 3.1 Written Texts

3.1 Novel Study, Examinations, Practise Papers, Reading

Nineteen Eighty-Four Type Up - Mock Exam 2020 Statement #4: The most significant texts are cautionary tales “The best books are those that tell us what we already know.” Written by George Orwell in his dystopia Nineteen Eighty-Four, this idea of literature presenting...

« Older Entries

Tags

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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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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