Audience

open access

Location

London

Starts from 06/11/2017 to 06/11/2017

The diary of Anne Frank is often used as a ‘way in’ to studying the Holocaust. Anne is also an iconic figure in popular culture; interpreted and reinterpreted, in a range of media from plays, films and TV through to Japanese cartoon books.

To mark the anniversary of Anne Frank’s death in March 1945, the Centre for Holocaust Education is launching our new additional CPD workshop, Whose Anne Frank? Representations of a young girl? on Monday 6 November.

This workshop, specifically designed for English teachers, but open to any teach interested, uses Critical Discourse Analysis to explore several of these representations and to highlight the tensions that exist between the popular ideas about Anne Frank and what she actually wrote. This reveals a more nuanced and profound writer who still has the power to shock some people.

  • effective classroom approaches
  • free teaching and learning resources
  • food and wine reception

Programme timings tbc: the session will start approx 16:00 – 16:15, and will approx 1 hr 30 mins/1 hr 45 mins.

Workshop led by:

Darius Jackson Lecturer in Holocaust and History Education
Centre for Holocaust Education
UCL Institute of Education

Venue: tbc

Booking essential. The event is free of charge and places are limited to secondary school teachers.

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