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Anglais Monde Contemporain Amerique du Nord Jour 1 Bac General 2026

[latex]


Classe : Terminale
Centre d’examen : Centres Etrangers Afrique
Matiere : Langues, Littératures et Cultures Étrangères et Régionales – Anglais Monde Contemporain
Annee : 2026
Session : Normale
Duree de l’epreuve : 3 heures 30
Repere de l’epreuve : 26-LLCERANMCG11
Calculatrice : non autorisee

SUJET 1 – Environnements en mutation

Partie 1 (16 pts):

Say what the documents show about the challenges that the city of Los Angeles faces after the January 2025 wildfires.

Partie 2 (4 pts):

Traduisez en français le passage du document B (l. 1-6):

For seven years, the promise of the 2028 Summer Olympics has shimmered on the horizon as a source of pride and celebration for Los Angeles. There were concerns: the homelessness crisis, cost overruns, comparisons with the successful Games last year in Paris. But for the most part, 2028 held out the hope of delivering as much of a boost for the region’s economy and international image as the Olympics of 1984. That has all been called into question in the space of a week.

Document A: Can LA fire-proof itself? (BBC, 28 June 2025)

Document B: For Los Angeles, fires ramp up difficulty of hosting 2028 Summer Games (The New York Times, January 13, 2025)

Document C: Karen Bass, Los Angeles Mayor, State Of City Speech, 21 April 2025

Document D: A home destroyed by the Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades, L.A. (Los Angeles Daily News, June 3, 2025)

SUJET 2 – Faire société

Partie 1 (16 pts):

Say what the documents reveal about the tensions surrounding the Jamaican coastline and the reactions they have provoked.

Partie 2 (4 pts):

Traduisez en français le passage du document B (l. 4-10):

This was paradise – where neither our history nor our land belonged to us. Every year Black Jamaicans owned less and less of the coast that bejewelled our island to the outside world, all our beauty bought up by rich hoteliers, or sold off to foreigners by the descendants of white enslavers who earned their fortunes on our backs, and who still own enough of Jamaica today to continue to turn a profit. But my great-grandfather would not sell our little beachside. He held on to his home.

Document A: Why locals in this island nation can’t use its stunning beaches (SBSNews, 3 November 2024)

Document B: Safiya Sinclair, How to Say Babylon – A Jamaican Memoir, 2023

Document C: More free beaches: Jamaica moves to improve public beach access for residents (Caribbean National Weekly, 28 May 2025)

Document D: JaBBEM activists voice their concerns (The Gleaner, 2 August 2023)

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