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Note: This podcast is not about teaching

An episode of the Education in Dystopia podcast, hosted by Mr. Arizona, titled "Note: This podcast is not about teaching" was published on May 11, 2021 and runs 1 minutes.

May 11, 2021 ·1m · Education in Dystopia

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Just to clarify the domain and focus of this podcast

Just to clarify the domain and focus of this podcast

This Week in Dystopia The Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation This Week in Dystopia is a podcast hosted by Christopher Robichaud, Harvard Kennedy School Senior Lecturer. A podcast of politics, theory, and pop culture, This Week in Dystopia, brings commentary from the halls of Harvard to everyone's headphones. Bell Theory Project Mary Bell This podcast uses the literary theory Gender Studies to analyze Tris’ character in the dystopian novel, Divergent, by Veronica Roth. Your First Fifteen Pages Sandra O'Donnell/Judd Vowell This podcast is for beginning writers AND for those who have a pile of thanks but no thanks rejections sitting in their inbox. It is for the novice writer with an inkling of a book idea AND for those who've heard crickets from the queries they've sent out. It is for those who dream of being on a bestseller list or winning a major book award AND for those who want to write the best book possible and to see where it takes them. Hosted by Sandra O'Donnell and Judd Vowell, Your First Fifteen Pages is the help you need to make your book a success. As a book coach and literary agent Sandra knows what it takes to go from a good story to a great story and from being an unsigned writer to an author with an agent and a book contract. Judd's writing journey began with a dystopian trilogy, that didn't take Amazon by storm, but did garner a small following. Judd shares his writing experience and how his writing has changed since discovering Your First Fifteen Pages and through his work with Sand „Eine Uni – ein Buch“ beim Erlanger Poetenfest Clip ID:8303 Eine Veranstaltung des Erlanger Poetenfests in Kooperation mit der FAU.In seiner Erzählung „Die Maschine steht still“ hat der britische Schriftsteller E. M. Forster bereits vor mehr als 100 Jahren die Entwicklung des Internets der Dinge vorweggenommen. Er zeichnet eine Dystopie, in der das menschliche Leben perfekt durch die „Maschine“ geregelt wird, mit allem Komfort und aller Abhängigkeit von der Technik. Dabei wirft das 1909 veröffentlichte Werk aktuelle Fragen auf: Was bedeutet Selbstbestimmung in einer immer stärker durch Informationstechnologie geprägten Welt und wie kann man sie wahren gegenüber Maschinen, die unser Leben bestimmen?
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