Listen&Learn: The Future Library
28th September 2022 by Jaksyn PeacockPre-listening vocabulary
- ongoing: continuing, not complete
- acclaimed: praised for an accomplishment
- manuscript: an unpublished text
- century: 100 years
- anthology: a collection of written works by different authors
Listening activity
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 1:20 — 1.2MB)
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Gapfill exercise
Comprehension questions
See answers below
- The trees for the Future Library were planted in
a. Scotland
b. Norway
c. Canada - Margaret Atwood was
a. the first author to contribute
b. the only author to contribute
c. the most recent author to contribute - The purpose of the trees is to
a. hide the location of the manuscripts
b. decorate the outside of the library
c. provide paper 100 years in the future
Discussion/essay questions
- It is impossible to fully predict what will happen in 100 years. Do you think the project will achieve its goal? Why or why not?
Transcript
The Future Library is an ongoing creative project started by Scottish artist Katie Paterson. In 2014, Paterson began planting trees in Oslo, Norway. She planned to make this the site of a library for people 100 years in the future. Every year since, Paterson has asked a different acclaimed author to write a manuscript for the library. The manuscripts will be locked in glass boxes until 2114. The goal is to collect a century’s worth of stories and allow readers of the future to experience the changing times. Canadian author Margaret Atwood was the first person to provide a manuscript, and 6 other texts have since joined the Future Library. By the time that all 100 stories are complete, the trees in Oslo will have grown enough to become paper for an anthology.
Answers to comprehension questions
1b 2a 3c