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Voting in the World’s Biggest Democracy

After six weeks of voting, the results were as rapid as they were clear: Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu Nationalist party, BJP, returned to power with a landslide victory in India's elections

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Indigenous Rap: Young Australian of the Year

This year’s Young Australian of the Year is Danzal Baker, alias Baker Boy, a 22-year-old Indigenous Australian who raps in three languages. As well as achieving success in rap, dance and graffiti, Baker mentors Indigenous youth to help them achieve their dreams.

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Zombies, Loach, Tarantino and Elton John at Cannes

The subjects covered by the films in the main competition at this year’s Cannes Festival are very varied. The English-language competitors are a case in point, ranging from zombies in small town America to washed-up actors in Hollywood, to an indictment of the gig economy in the UK.

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Eating Your Greens

National Vegetarian Week is taking place from 13 to 19 May in the UK, encouraging people to move towards a plant-based diet for their health and the planet’s.

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Going Vegetarian Videos

For National Vegetarian Week, Britain’s Vegetarian Society has created three short videos about going vegetarian, or at least trying to eat less meat and fish. The three 1-minute videos would make a great class group activity, with each group watching a video about eating less meat to help the environment, improve their health, or to support animal rights.

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To Kill a Mockingbird: Adapting to Film

Adapting a scene from a book as a film scene, or a film scene as prose, is an excellent English-learning exercise. To see how the experts do it, a talk at the American Library in Paris analyses the adaptation of one of America’s classic books into one of its classic films. Judith Merians, Hollywood executive and film professor, will analyse the film adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird , the classic coming-of-age story and examination of race relations in the U.S.A. As well as an overview, she will juxtapose specific scenes from the book with their film versions. Harper Lee won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize for fiction with her story set in 1930s, Depression era Alabama. It is told from the point of view of a little girl, Scout Finch, who observes the drama play out when her lawyer father Atticus defends Tom Robinson, a black man, who is accused of raping a white woman. The novel was adapted as a film the following year, directed by Robert Mulligan and starring Gregory Peck as Atticus. The film won four Oscars, including best actor and best screenplay. Lee was born in 1926 in Monroeville, Alabama. She retired from public life in 1964. To Kill a Mockingbird was her only published novel until the publication of a follow-up, Go Set a Watchman , in 2015, less than a year before her death. This book was actually written before Mockingbird, a sort of first draft of the classic novel, but the Scout narrator is an adult. To Kill a Mockingbird is widely taught in U.S. schools and universities. It was voted America’s favourite novel in a 2018 competition organised by PBS. A theatre adaptation is currently on Broadway. The photo above shows stars Jeff Daniels and Gbenga Akinnagbe as Atticus Finch and Tom Robinson.   A Night at the Movies with Judith Merians: To Kill A Mockingbird Wednesday 22 May at 7.30 p.m. American Library in Paris Free

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It's a Boy!

Britain is celebrating a new royal baby, as Prince Harry and Meghan Markle announced the birth of their son on 6 May 2019. The British capital decided to have babies welcome the baby.

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La semaine des langues 2019

The fourth edition of the Semaine des Langues is taking place from 13 to 18 May. This year’s theme, like last year’s, is “Let’s Share Languages”.

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Who Am I? Competition Winners

Here are the winning quizzes in our A2-level writing competition to write a 10-question “Who Am I?” quiz about a famous English-speaker. As promised, we’ve transformed their questions into “Biobox” videos. Can you guess who they are?

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Biobox: Queen Elizabeth II

Our bioboxes are short "Who Am I?" quizzes to help introduce pupils to famous figures in the English-speaking world. This one was written by pupils for our "Who Am I?" contest.

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Biobox: Sherlock Holmes

Our bioboxes are short "Who Am I?" quizzes to help introduce pupils to famous figures in the English-speaking world. This one was written by pupils for our "Who Am I?" contest.

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Biobox: Beyoncé

Our bioboxes are short "Who Am I?" quizzes to help introduce pupils to famous figures in the English-speaking world. This one was written by a pupil for our "Who Am I?" contest.

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Biobox: Charles Darwin

Our bioboxes are short "Who Am I?" quizzes to help introduce pupils to famous figures in the English-speaking world. This one was written by pupils for our "Who Am I?" contest.

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Biobox: Emma Watson

Our bioboxes are short "Who Am I?" quizzes to help introduce pupils to famous figures in the English-speaking world. This one was written by a pupil for our "Who Am I?" contest.

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ANZAC Day

While most countries involved in World War I commemorate those who served in that and later wars on 11 November, the date the War ended, in Australia and New Zealand, the main commemoration is ANZAC Day, 25 April, the day in 1915 when their servicemen first saw action, in the disastrous Gallipoli Campaign.

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This is the end…

The world of Pop culture will remember April 2019 for two things: the release of Avengers: Endgame and the final series of Game of Throne s . Both mark the culmination of tentacular stories with many iconic characters which could die at the really end… or not. As Game of Thrones approaches the midpoint of its final season*, Marvel, after eleven years and 22 movies, reaches a conclusion to the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) with "Avengers: Endgame” coming into theaters on April 24. Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Captain America (Chris Evans) and their fellow superheroes are getting a second shot at Thanos (Josh Brolin) after their brutal Infinity War defeat one year ago. https://youtu.be/TcMBFSGVi1c If you haven't seen all of the MCU movies, it would be a bit hard to go into this one filled with callbacks and meta winks to every movie in the series. So, if you have the time, the main arc to watch or rewatch is the one with these three films : "Captain America: Winter Soldier" (2014), "Captain America: Civil War" (2016) and "Infinity War" (2018). They are all directed by the Russo brothers and written by the same screenwriters, the same team who wrote and directed "Endgame”   What is the Marvel Cinematic Universe and why did Marvel start with these characters? The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) is composed of 22 films. Each relates its own distinct story but is also connected with other films in the MCU, to tell an overarching tale. It's a technique Marvel Comics pioneer Stan Lee also used in his comics. Some Marvel characters appear in films that don't connect to the MCU because in 2007 Marvel was recovering from bankruptcy and had sold the film rights of some of the company's most popular characters like the X-Men and Spider-Man. Marvel still owned Iron Man, the Hulk, Thor and Captain America who form the core of the Avengers team. Marvel used the early MCU films to introduce these heroes, then brought these characters together for the crossover film Avengers Assemble . This crossover was planned from the very beginning. The MCU is the most successful film franchise of all time, making more than $18.4 billion so far.   Here is the complet list of the MCU films. Iron Man (2008) The Incredible Hulk (2008) Iron Man 2 (2010) Thor (2011) Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) The Avengers (2012) Iron Man 3 (2013) Thor: The Dark World (2013) Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) Guardians Of The Galaxy (2014) Avengers: Age Of Ultron (2015) Ant-Man (2015) Captain America: Civil War (2016) Doctor Strange (2016) Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017) Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017) Thor: Ragnarok (2017) Black Panther (2018) Avengers: Infinity War (2018) Ant-Man And The Wasp (2018) Captain Marvel (2019) Avengers: Endgame (2019)     *Jon Snow, Daenerys Targaryen and their allies are set to battle the White Walkers at Winterfell. The April 28 episode stands to be the biggest action sequence in the Emmy-winning drama's history!

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Oops!

Oops! That’s not the right answer. Go back and try again .

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Take Your Students to “An American in Paris”

The Châtelet Theatre in Paris is re-opening in September and returning to its tradition of putting on large-scale musicals, in their original language. The opening offering is George and Ira Gershwin’s An American in Paris. There are special matinée performances for schools on Thursdays 12 and 19 December at 3 p.m.

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Aretha Franklin Honoured with a Pulitzer Prize

Soul singer Aretha Franklin has been posthumously honoured with a Pulitzer Prize. The 2019 winners list revealed on 15 April also included Richard Power’s extraordinary novel The Overstory and The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal for their investigations on President Donald Trump.

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Dancing Nina Simone

Britain’s celebrated modern dance company, Rambert, is celebrating singer Nina Simone with a dance-theatre piece featuring musicians live on stage. Simone, who died in 2003, was one of the great, and unclassifiable, popular singers of the 20th century, and a strong proponent of Civil Rights.

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Winter is Here

After 8 seasons, "Game of Thrones" is finally coming to an end…. until a series of prequels hit our screens.

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Screen Tourism: “Game of Thrones” Fans Flock to Northern Ireland

Game of Thrones may be set in the imaginary Seven Kingdoms, but it was filmed in real locations around the world. Many locations, and all the studio work, were done in Northern Ireland and the country is attracting crowds of tourists anxious to walk in the footsteps of their heroes.

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Discovering Oceania

A new exhibition at the Musée Quai Branly-Jacques Chirac explores the vast continent of Oceania, where water is omnipresent in real and metaphorical senses. The exhibition was originated at the Royal Academy in London to commemorate the journeys of James Cook in search of a mythical southern continent in the late Eighteenth Century. Cook never found the inexistent land mass geographers believed must exist to balance the globe. What Cook and his crew encountered on arrival was a vast number of island civilisations covering almost a third of the world’s surface: from Tahiti in Polynesia, to the scattered archipelagos and islands of Melanesia and Micronesia. The exhibition includes unique historic artefacts from museums collections but also work by contemporary Oceanian artists around the themes of meetings, memories, past and future. Oceania: exhibition trailer from Royal Academy of Arts on Vimeo . The exhibition opens with a section on journeys. From 8000 BC till 1300 AD, skilled South Asian navigators explored the South Pacific and made its islands their homes. Common origins mean there are similarities in the languages and lifestyle of the different islanders but isolation and specific geographical conditions meant that each adapted and adopted its own specific characteristics. The exhibition is full of artefacts from across the region — often examples of indigenous cultures that Europeans collected, while trying to replace the cultures that created them with Christianity and “civilisation”. Past, Present and Future The exhibit isn’t only facing towards the past. It also features many works by contemporary artists from Oceania. A monumental blue "wave" marks the entrance of the exhibition. It is made using a traditional Maori weaving technique but it is woven from blue plastic tarpaulins which are omnipresent in Maori communities. The collective who created it share their stories and experience on the exhibition site. A magnificently carved piano again confronts indigenous and colonial culture, referring to Jane Campion’s film The Piano (1993) based on a classic New Zealand novel where the clash of cultures is exemplified by European missionaries trying to transport a grand piano to a. inaccessible place with a totally inappropriate climate for the sensitive instrument. The work, by Michael Parekowhai, is entitled He Korero Purakau mo Te Awanui o Te Motu: story of a New Zealand river. The piano, symbol of European civilisation, has been transformed in turn with the technique Maori use for the canoes or wake that transported them thousands of miles over the Pacific. In a video installation, another Maori artist, Lisa Reihana, reinvents a 19th century European representation of exotic Oceania: French artist Jean Gabriel Charvet’s panoramic wallpaper entitled The Savages of the Pacific Sea. Reihana's work, In Pursuit of Venus (Infected) , pictures Captain Cook’s expedition’s encounters with different Pacific peoples. Cook’s expedition was ostensibly a scientific mission to observe the planet Venus. Reihana reimagines the meetings of cultures from the point of view of the peoples of Oceania. Less romantic idyll and more colonial nightmare, with the arrival of infectious diseases brought by the Europeans which decimated local populations. The exhibition closes on a major contemporary problem: rising sea levels threating the future of many island nations. In this video, poet Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner from the Marshall Islands describes the attachment that island peoples have to their land. She concludes, Tell them we don’t want to leave we’ve never wanted to leave and that we are nothing without our islands. https://youtu.be/w9D88ST9qbw Océanie Musée du quai Branly Jacques Chirac Till 7 July See our webpicks for some excellent videos exploring works and themes from the exhibition.

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Oceania Through Videos

The Oceania exhibition that is now on at the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris originated at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. The RA has a number of videos in English online in connection with the exhibition that are excellent for class work on the topic.

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Destination: Moon

To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Moon landings, take your pupils on a guided visit in English of the Moon exhibition at the Grand Palais in Paris before the summer holidays.

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Singing the Great Famine

One of Ireland's most popular folk singer-songwriters, Declan O'Rourke, spent fifteen years writing a song cycle of stories about the Great Irish Famine. He'll be presenting his award-winning songs at the Irish Cultural Centre on Thursday 4 April.

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Save the Date: Rockwell in Caen

To commemorate the 75th anniversary the D-Day landings, the Mémorial de Caen is hosting a touring exhibition dedicated to Norman Rockwell's depictions of President Roosevelt's vision of a post-war future.

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