Aperçu du sujet
SUJET 1 Le sujet porte sur la thématique « Voyages, territoires, frontières ». 1ère partie Prenez connaissance de la thématique ci-dessus et du dossier composé des documents A, B et C et traitez en anglais la consigne suivante (500 mots environ) : Taking into account the different points of view
SUJET 1 Le sujet porte sur la thématique « Voyages, territoires, frontières ». 1ère partie Prenez connaissance de la thématique ci-dessus et du dossier composé des documents A, B et C et traitez en anglais la consigne suivante (500 mots environ) : Taking into account the different points of view and perceptions, show how the experience of isolation in Australia is conveyed in the three documents. 2ième partie Traduisez le passage suivant du document C en français : When I was a teenager, my family moved to another island, and I asked to be sent to boarding school. When I had to come home for weekends, I’d spend all my time on the phone to friends, wishing I was with them. Now I’m in my 30s, I find myself seeking out that sense of isolation. If my husband suggests a holiday, I always research sparsely populated destinations in Scotland or Scandinavia. When I was growing up, the only outside noise I heard was bird song, and the night was pitch black. (lines 27 to 34) 21-LLCERANJA1 Page : 2/12 Document A The bus started at dawn next day, and drove on southwards down the tarmac road. […] As they went the vegetation grew sparser and the sun grew hotter, till by the time they stopped at Tennant Creek for a meal and a rest the country had become pure sand desert. They went on after an hour, driving at fifty to fifty-five miles an hour down 5 the scorching road past tiny places of two or three houses dignified with a name, Wauchope, and Barrow Creek and Aileron. Toward evening they found themselves running towards the Macdonnell Ranges1, lines of bare red hills against the pale blue sky, and at about dusk they ran slowly into Alice Springs.[…] [Jean] changed her dress and strolled out in the town after tea, walking very slowly down the broad suburban 10 roads, examining the town. She found it as Joe Harman had described it to her, a pleasant place with plenty of young people in it. In spite of its tropical surroundings and the bungalow nature of the houses there was a faint suggestion of an English suburb in Alice Springs which made her feel at home. There were the houses standing each in a small garden fenced 15 around or bordered by a hedge for privacy; the streets were laid out in