1984 Week 4 lesson 2

In class today
  • 1984 
  • Language as a tool of power
        - Newspeak
  • Read ch 6-8
        - Answer questions in Week 4 lesson 2
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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 5

This lesson contains 27 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.

Items in this lesson

In class today
  • 1984 
  • Language as a tool of power
        - Newspeak
  • Read ch 6-8
        - Answer questions in Week 4 lesson 2

Slide 1 - Slide

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The opening sentence of the novel is:
“It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen”
What does this opening suggest about the story?
A
Something is wrong in this society
B
Reality has been altered in this world
C
Signs of indoctrination
D
This is a fantasy world where there are 26 hours in a day

Slide 2 - Quiz

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What do you think happens at the Two Minutes Hate meetings?

A
It's propaganda (bandwagon & name-calling)
B
It's propaganda (Transfer & testimonials)
C
It's propaganda (Plain Folks & Euphemisms)
D
It's propaganda (Facts, figures, statistics & Sympathy)

Slide 3 - Quiz

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Why do you think Winston dislikes most women?

Slide 4 - Open question

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What do you think the Thought Police does?

Slide 5 - Open question

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Why is it dangerous for Winston to think about his hatred against the Thought Police, the Party and Big Brother?

A
Because the Thought Police can read your mind
B
Because hate can lead to rebellion. Rebellion is punishable by death
C
Because he could accidentally tell people about his hatred

Slide 6 - Quiz

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maintained law and order
Rewrites history (rewrites journals, newspapers, books, etc.)
Promotes war, justifies war, wages war
plans economic shortages
Ministry of Peace
Ministry of Truth
Ministry of Plenty
Ministry of Love

Slide 7 - Drag question

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Explain the irony of these Ministries

Slide 8 - Open question

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Who comes to Winston's door while he is writing in his diary?
A
Mrs. Parsons (neighbour)
B
Thought Police
C
Junior Spies
D
O'brien

Slide 9 - Quiz

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What are the world’s three ruling nations?

Slide 10 - Open question

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Why does Winston have trouble remembering his childhood?

A
He simply has bad memory
B
His childhood traumas are blocked off
C
He has no photos or other records of that time.
D
He had an accident as a child that damaged his brain

Slide 11 - Quiz

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When did Big Brother first emerge as a political figure?
A
Somewhere around 1960
B
Somewhere around 1930
C
It is not clear because historic records are altered
D
A couple years before the start of the story

Slide 12 - Quiz

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Language as a tool of power?
Discuss with neighbour:
- How is language used as a tool of power?
- Examples?

Slide 13 - Slide

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Language decides what I can think about
A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 14 - Quiz

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Language decides what I can feel
A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 15 - Quiz

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1

Slide 16 - Video

Relevant bit: 00:43 - 2:20.  Skip the rest.


02:20
Could a totalitarian government limit our ability to think about the concept of freedom by removing the word from our collective vocabulary?
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 17 - Quiz

Pick students to explain their answer.

Newspeak
  • Official language in Oceania
  • Designed and controlled by the government
  • Language as a tool of power: 
   

Slide 18 - Slide

Language as a tool of Power:

- Limiting grammar and vocabulary:

* Cannot express free thought
* Cannot express feelings

In effect:
- Cannot think freely
- Losing emotion
Propaganda?
‘Comrades!’ cried an eager youthful voice. ‘Attention,
comrades! We have glorious news for you. We have won the battle for production! Returns now completed of the output of all classes of consumption goods show that the standard of living has risen by no less than 20 per cent over the past year. All over Oceania this morning there were irrepressible spontaneous demonstrations when workers marched out of factories and offices and paraded through the streets with banners voicing their gratitude to Big Brother for the new, happy life which his wise leadership has bestowed upon us. Here are some of the completed figures. Foodstuffs——’

1st paragraph, page 73.

Slide 19 - Slide

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Draw a parallel to Animal Farm

Slide 20 - Open question

Give examples from propaganda in Animal Farm (stats, figures, facts tactic)
4

Slide 21 - Video

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00:29
Qualities of "dystopian novel"

Slide 22 - Mind map

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01:11
Post-WW2 London
Experiences in the Spanish Civil War
Working for the BBC as a news reporter
Setting of Airstrip One
Distorting the truth
Ministry of Truth

Slide 23 - Drag question

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04:27
How did people in the 1950s relate to the book?
A
They saw it as a study of totalitarianism (Stalinism, Hitler's Nazi Germany)
B
They were afraid of the technological advancements at the time
C
They saw it as a warning of their privacy being invaded by computers and security cameras
D
They saw it as an anti-capitalist manifesto

Slide 24 - Quiz

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04:41
Critique of Stalinism / Hitler's Nazi Germany
Distorting/controlling reality/ the truth
privacy being invaded by computers and security cameras
1970-2000
Recent years
1950s

Slide 25 - Drag question

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Discuss in groups
  • Newspeak in our world?

  • Facts, objective news, reality, truth?

  • Is freedom of thought/expression important to you?

- Report back to class

Slide 26 - Slide

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Homework
See whiteboard for homework.

Slide 27 - Slide

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