1. A definition of the word "anti-hero" in URBAN DICTIONARY
The anti-hero is the hero who does the right thing, albeit with tactics
that aren't always what you would call ethical. They are more interested
in getting the job done than in doing it as virtuously as possible,
therefore showing how morally ambiguous they are. The anti-hero has
become more popular with society today because people can identify
better with the good-guy who sometimes does the not-so-good things; the
hero who does no wrong is outdated and is becoming increasingly
irrelevant in this day and age. They are the product of a society in
which the line between good and bad is becoming harder to tell.
2. VIDEO: 1. TOP 10 TV ANTI HEROES - watch the video
http://watchmojo.com/video/id/11790/
3.
His motives are praise-worthy
He is the epitome of the anti-hero
a suburban housewife
He / she makes a living by...
At first his only concern is to provide for his family
He gradually becomes power-hungry and greedy
Greed gets the better of him
Redeeming qualities : devoted – loving – caring – he/she will do what it takes to provide for his/her family – willing to sacrifice himself /herself to keep his/her family safe
We can’t
HELP CHEERING THEM ON = We can’t HELP ROOTING FOR THEM
We can't help identifying with them
We can relate to them
these characters are compelling
Someone who
illegally evades the
draft, as opposed to
a conscientious objector, who is granted official, legal exemption
from military
duty. In active protest against United States involvement in the Vietnam War, many
Americans publicly
burned draft registration cards, risking
imprisonment; others
fled to other countries, such as Canada or Sweden.
FAILURE :
http://watchmojo.com/video/id/11790/
3.
ANTI HEROES
: basic vocabulary
They would
do anything to ACHIEVE THEIR GOAL.
He/she plays by his/her own rules
He/she plays by his/her own rules
They have a
SPLIT PERSONALITY
They COMMIT
EVIL DEEDS – They are EVIL-DOERS
They are
RUTHLESS
They are
willing to TAKE THE LAW INTO THEIR OWN HANDS
They are
willing to PLAY DIRTY
They are
FLAWED (just like us) (flawed = imperfect)
They use
UNETHICAL/UNORTHODOX/QUESTIONABLE methods to ACHIEVE their goal
His motives are praise-worthy
He is the epitome of the anti-hero
a suburban housewife
He / she makes a living by...
At first his only concern is to provide for his family
He gradually becomes power-hungry and greedy
Greed gets the better of him
Redeeming qualities : devoted – loving – caring – he/she will do what it takes to provide for his/her family – willing to sacrifice himself /herself to keep his/her family safe
We can't help identifying with them
We can relate to them
these characters are compelling
4. TIM in THE RUNAWAY - MUHAMMAD ALI in the film ALI
DEFINITION
OF A DRAFT-DODGER TAKEN FROM dictionary.com
a. THE RUNAWAY
An act of
bravery
An act of
cowardice
DECISION :
He has to
make a decision
He can
either jump....or...
He is given
an opportunity to...
He fails to
/ he is unable to seize this opporunity.
FEAR :
Tim is
afraid of being judged
He is
afraid of being called a coward, a traitor
He is
afraid of what people will say about him
He gives up = he backs down
He fails to
live up to his principles.
He is not
brave/strong/heroic enough to be faithful to his ideal.
He is
unable to make the right decision
REGRET avec
WISH + HAD(n’t) –PP
He wishes
he had been brave enough to jump overboard.
He wishes
he hadn’t gone to Vietnam
He wishes
he had lived up to his principles
He wishes
he hadn’t been afraid of what people would say.
He wishes
he hadn’t been such a coward
b. ALI
He stands
his ground
He will not
back down
He doesn’t
budge = he won’t budge (= he refuses to…)
He is
fearless / dauntless
He remains
adamant (in his refusal to...) = il reste inflexible
He
jeopardizes his career by refusing to ....
He is
charismatic, outspoken...
He doesn’t
hold a grudge against innocent people in VN = en vouloir à
He holds a
grudge against white people who....
He is
willing to go to jail
Point Grammaire:
expression du regret avec WISH
Using wish for past regrets
To regret means that we
now feel sorry for something which happened (or didn’t happen) in the past
For example:
‘I regret waking up so late this morning.’ = I am now sorry that I woke up late.
‘I regret not studying harder in school.’ = I am now sorry that I didn’t study enough.
In English we can use the word 'wish' to talk about
our past regrets :
Let’s take a look at our first example sentence using wish:
‘I wish I had studied harder in
school.’
(wish + pronoun + past perfect)
Again in this example sentence the speaker is now
sorry that he did not study harder in school.
Here are some more examples:
‘Noel wishes he had visited the Sorbonne
when he was in Paris.’
‘We wish we had been kinder to her before
she got sick.’
‘They wish they hadn’t spent so much money
on their shopping trip.’
5. ADDITIONAL READING
CONCLUSION
5. ADDITIONAL READING
Muhammad
Ali and Vietnam
His refusal
to be drafted to fight in the war transcended the boxing ring, which he had
dominated, at great personal cost.
Jun 4, 2016
– The Atlantic
Muhammad Ali’s stand against the Vietnam War transcended not only the ring,
which he had dominated as the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world, but
also the realms of faith and politics.
“His biggest win came not in the ring but in our courts in his fight for
his beliefs,” Eric Holder, the former U.S. attorney general, said Saturday.
On March 9, 1966, at the height of the war, Ali’s draft status was revised
to make him eligible to fight in Vietnam, leading him to say that as a black
Muslim he was a conscientious objector, and would not enter the U.S. military.
“My conscience won’t let me go shoot my brother, or some darker people, or
some poor hungry people in the mud for big powerful America,” he said at the time. “And shoot them for what?
They never called me nigger, they never lynched me, they didn’t put no dogs on
me, they didn’t rob me of my nationality, rape and kill my mother and father. …
Shoot them for what? How can I shoot them poor people? Just take me to jail.”
A little more than a year later, on April 28, 1967, Ali, then 25 years old,
appeared in Houston for his scheduled induction into the U.S. military. He
repeatedly refused to step forward when his name was called—despite being warned
by an officer that he was committing a felony offense that was punishable by
five years in prison and a fine of $10,000. His refusal led to Ali’s arrest and
eventual conviction—though he stayed out of prison while his case was appealed.
His license to box was suspended in New York the same day, and his title
stripped. Ali was unable to obtain a boxing license in the U.S. for the next
three years.
Ali’s continued refusal to go to Vietnam—despite
repeated pressure—coincided with the war’s growing unpopularity in the U.S. And
in the three years he didn’t fight, Ali became a prominent speaker at college
campuses across the U.S., as the anti-war movement grew in strength
President Obama, in his
remarks Saturday on Ali’s death spoke of the personal cost of the champion’s
stance during the Vietnam era.
“It would earn him enemies
on the left and the right, make him reviled, and nearly send him to jail,”
Obama said. “But Ali stood his ground. And his victory helped us get used to
the America we recognize today.”
CONCLUSION
Compare and contrast
Tim (The Runaway) and Muhammad Ali’s behavior during the war.
On the one hand, MA
behaved in a truly heroic way when he was faced with military induction( =
incorporation) : He refused point-blank
to be sent to VN. He justified his attitude by declaring that he was a
conscientious objector. He said he didn’t hold a grudge against the
people of VN who contrary to white Americans never attacked or humiliated him,
they never looked down on him.. However, he clearly said that he was not
a draft-dodger and that he had rather go to jail than shoot poor innocent
people.
On the other hand, Tim
(in the short story written by Tim O’Brien) is a young man who intends to flee
to Canada to avoid being sent to Vietnam. However, he eventually backs down
(gets cold feet) and allows himself to be sent to VN despite his convictions.
He had rather betray his principles than be called a traitor.
So unlike MA who stood his ground
even if it meant going to jail, Tim was not brave enough to live up to his
principles.
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