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    English Advanced: Assessment Task 3 Comparative Study of Texts and Contexts: Frankenstein and Blade Runner William Meadley Dear Mr. Ridley Scott‚ I Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelly am writing to you after viewing ‘Blade Runner’. I became aware that your composition and my own‚ ‘Frankenstein’ 1818 are very similar in themes and ideas. I also noticed similarities between characters of both our compositions‚ which together evoke questioning within our audience. We‚ as artists feel strongly about

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    Frankenstein Blade Runner Essay Analyse how ‘Frankenstein’ and ‘Blade Runner’ Imaginatively portray individuals who challenge the established values of the time. In your response‚ refer to both excerpts below. i) ‘Slave‚ I before reasoned with you‚ but you have proved yourself unworthy of my condescension. Remember that I have powers‚ you believe yourself miserable‚ but I can make you so wretched that the light of day will be hateful to you. You are my creator‚ but I am your master;-obey

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    play in society and what will its impacts be upon humanity? Evidence of this question being pondered by writers and composers can be seen through various different texts throughout time. The novel Frankenstein‚ written by Mary Shelly and the film Blade Runner‚ directed by Ridley Scott although composed over 150 years apart share this common question. The storyline‚ content and text type while vastly different‚ address similar themes and ideas concerning the ethical complications of science and technology

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    of Frankenstein and Blade Runner deepened your understanding of the ways the characters within a text are vehicles through which composers explore the values of their time? A comparative study of texts and contexts show how composers use characters to demonstrate the impact that the values of individuals have on the world. Despite a significant time difference between the novel‚ Frankenstein; or The Modern Prometheus‚ written by Mary Shelley in 1818‚ and the film‚ Blade Runner‚ directed by Sir Ridley

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    values or ideas that are present in the scene * Describe the film techniques (visual and aural) that are used to convey these values and ideas * Describe how the themes represent the directors (Ridley Scott) context After you have analysed Blade Runner they are to find excerpts (chapters or events) from Frankenstein and conduct the same analysis; * Summarise the scene * Outline the values or ideas that are present in the scene * Describe the language techniques that are used to

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    Texts In Time: Blade Runner and Frankenstein Syllabus Students compare how the treatment of similar content in a pair of texts composed in different times and contexts may reflect changing values and perspectives. By considering the texts in their contexts and comparing values‚ ideas and language forms and features‚ students come to a heightened understanding of the meaning and significance of each text. Module A: Comparative Study of Texts and Context This module requires students to

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    Defining Human How do we define "human?" This is a question that has become more difficult to answer day by day. With technological advances‚ the line between human and non-human has become blurred. In the movie Blade Runner‚ the distinct question of whether or not replicants can be classified as humans arises. The replicants are colons of humans‚ therefore‚ their behavior and actions are alike to those of humans. Nevertheless‚ these replicants do lack certain characteristics such as not having

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    paradigms corresponding to their social‚ economic and historical contexts. The capacity of thematic concepts to transcend time is manifest within Mary Shelley’s 19th century gothic novel Frankenstein (1818) and Ridley Scott’s science fiction film Blade Runner (1992) as both pose similar existentialist discourses regarding the fate of humanity. As a Romanticist‚ Shelley condemns humanity’s intrusive assumption as creator. Similarly‚ Scott responds to Shelley warning by also spurning man’s ruthless ambition

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    it would have reached an important landmark. What’s more‚ the Turing Test has been referenced many times in popular-culture portrayals of robots and artificial life – perhaps most notably inspiring the polygraph-like Voight-Kampff in the movie Blade Runner. It was also widely used in Alex Garland’s Ex Machina. An article on BBC explains that more often than not‚ these fictitious illustrations falsify the Turing Test‚ turning it into a measure of whether a robot can pass for human. The original Turing

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    effectively explore the elements which constitute humanity and convey similar warnings regarding the future of mankind through the use of representations within varying forms of texts. The novel Frankenstein (F) by Mary Shelly composed in 1818‚ and film Blade Runner (BR) directed by Ridley Scott in 1982‚ embody the above notions. A comparative study of these texts reveals that‚ despite the fact that the context of composition moulded both works‚ the distinct universal ideologies embedded within each text consisting

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