Welcome! Please consider how your attitude affects your and other students' experiences of the lesson.
Be respectful, come prepared, and show interest to have the best possible educational experience.
Recognise vocabulary related to the history and main issues of the culture war explain the historical aspects
Vocabulary & Game Show
Reading: How culture wars start
Group Writing Exercise
🕒~30-40 minutes
✍️By yourself or together with your classmate(s), complete the vocabulary worksheet and then compete in a friendly game of Jeopardy!
🎯Develops your vocabulary and writing skills
Echoes ➜ sounds that repeat because they bounce off a surface.
Culmination ➜ the highest or most important point of something.
Coalesce ➜ join or come together to form one group or thing.
Intervening ➜ happening between two events or times.
Strand ➜ a thin piece of something, like hair, thread, or string.
Genesis ➜ the beginning or origin of something.
Division ➜ the act of separating something into parts or groups.
Aspire ➜ to want or try very hard to achieve something.
Irreconcilable ➜ impossible to make friendly or agree again.
Polarised ➜ divided into two completely opposite sides or opinions.
Consensus ➜ general agreement among a group of people.
Salient ➜ very noticeable or important.
Partisan ➜ strongly supporting one side, often without considering others.
Homogeneous ➜ made up of things or people that are all the same or very similar.
Divergence ➜ a difference or separation between things that used to be similar.
Endemic ➜ regularly found among certain people or in a certain area.
Moderate ➜ not extreme; in the middle between two sides or opinions.
Sustained ➜ continuing for a long time without stopping.
Exacerbate ➜ to make a problem or situation worse.
Fractious ➜ easily upset, angry, or difficult to control.
🕒~15-20 minutes
✍️Discuss in writing the questions together with a classmate(s) and motivate your answer. This is your exit ticket!
🎯Develop your discussion and writing skills
The article shows that in the UK, media coverage of the "culture war" exploded from 21 articles to 534 in five years. The article also mentions that "Where America leads, Britain often follows." Does this also apply to Sweden? Why?
Using the article's insights (like the rise of 'noisy extremes' and political leaders focusing on 'division') is Sweden immune to this phenomenon, or is it already happening here?
What are the local "salient issues" (like same-sex marriage, segregation or gender identity) that serve as cultural battlegrounds in your society today?
Hint! How to motivate your answer
Start with a clear and direct answer to the question. Don't hide your opinion.
Immediately follow your position with the primary reason why you think that way.
Connect your reason to the texts, concepts, or examples from your experiences (the proof). This shows you've read and understood the material.