Out in the field,there’s a flower that looks like a gramophone horn. And honestly, it stops you. It opens like it knows somethingyou forgot to remember.Like sound can become shape.Like beauty can still surprise you. It does not shout.It just stands therepulling the whole field into its orbit,quiet as breath,bright as a thought you almost … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Field Notes for a Quiet Miracle” – Floral Gramophone, v.3
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – King Edward III by Shakespeare
The authorship of King Edward III has long lingered in the penumbra of the Shakespearean canon—half-shadow, half-illumination—yet to read it attentively is to feel, unmistakably, the pulse of a mind that would come to define the architecture of English drama. Whether wholly or partially the work of William Shakespeare, the play offers a compelling meditation … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – King Edward III by Shakespeare
T.A.E.’s Book Review – You Are a Badass by Jen Sincero
Jan Sincero’s You Are a Badass arrives with the brash confidence of a pep talk, but beneath its neon bravado lies a surprisingly revealing study of self-fashioning in late-capitalist self-help culture. The book’s central argument is simple enough to state and difficult enough to practice: the greatest obstacle to a transformed life is not the … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Review – You Are a Badass by Jen Sincero
Revisionist Poetry – “The Gramophone Bloom” – Floral Gramophone, v.2
In the field, a flower blooms in perfect form,Curved like the horn of an old gramophone.Its petals open, note by note,Unfolding a soft, impossible song. It seems to send out colour you can hear,A quiet music threading through the air.It lifts the eye, then lingers in the mind,As if sound itself had learned to flower … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “The Gramophone Bloom” – Floral Gramophone, v.2
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Henry VIII by Shakespeare
Henry VIII is one of Shakespeare’s most fascinating late history plays because it seems, at first glance, less like a drama of inward conflict than a spectacle of state. Yet beneath its pageantry lies a profound meditation on how power is performed, how history is narrated, and how easily human lives are crushed beneath the … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Henry VIII by Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “Field Check: Flowers Are Winning” – Floral Intensities, v.6: The Gen Z version, I hope…
Note (Disclaimer from a Gen X writer): I'm working on a different literary revision project related to using Gen Z vernacular to summarize some classic literature. Let me first admit that I am possibly failing miserably at removing myself from my Gen X mindset, and my love of older uses of English, so there is … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Field Check: Flowers Are Winning” – Floral Intensities, v.6: The Gen Z version, I hope…
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Richard III by Shakespeare
Shakespeare’s Richard III is one of the most electrifying studies of political ambition in all of literature, but its real brilliance lies in the way it makes villainy feel not merely monstrous, but theatrical. Richard is not simply a man who pursues power; he is a man who understands that power is inseparable from performance. … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Richard III by Shakespeare
Revisionist Poetry – “Requiem of the Meadow” – Floral Intensities, v.5
In the dusk-field, the flowers riselike pale devotions from the darkened soil,their silken mouths half-opento the secrets of the dying light. The wind moves through themas through a chapel of thin bones,and each stem shiverswith the hush of something ancientstirring beneath the earth. Their colours are not bright now,but deepened — blood-warm, bruise-blue,the velvet tones … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Requiem of the Meadow” – Floral Intensities, v.5
Revisionist Pedagogy – Integrating Second-Language Pedagogy to Foster Social and News Media Literacy
In a digitally saturated public sphere, students increasingly encounter information through social feeds, short-form video, algorithmically curated headlines, and multilingual online communities. This environment makes media and information literacy a fundamental educational priority rather than an optional enrichment. UNESCO defines media and information literacy (MIL) as the set of skills and attitudes needed to access, … Continue reading Revisionist Pedagogy – Integrating Second-Language Pedagogy to Foster Social and News Media Literacy
The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Henry VI, Part 3 by Shakespeare
William Shakespeare’s Henry VI, Part 3 is one of the bleakest and most relentless of his early histories, a play in which political legitimacy collapses into brute force and the very idea of kingship becomes inseparable from violence. If Part 1and Part 2 trace the weakening of English rule, Part 3 stages the full catastrophe: … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Henry VI, Part 3 by Shakespeare
