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Clifford Baker

POETRY PAIRINGS - The Learning Network Blog - NYTimes.com - 5 views

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    "In our weekly "Poetry Pairing" series we collaborate with the Poetry Foundation to feature a work from its American Life in Poetry project alongside content from The Times that somehow echoes, extends or challenges the poem's themes"
Dana Huff

Put Poor Students to Work - Brainstorm - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 14 views

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    Sent to me just now via a my blog. Would be a great piece to pair with "A Modest Proposal."
Cynthia Roberson

Visas for dollars: Give me your Gucci-clad masses | The Economist - 2 views

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    Article to pair with Lazarus poem "The New Colossus".
Adam Babcock

YouTube - SearchStories's Channel - 9 views

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    Every search is a quest. Every quest is a story. These videos show that anyone can do anything when paired with the power of search.
Dana Huff

Dickens daren't tell the truth about the real Oliver Twist workhouses | Mail Online - 0 views

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    This article describes conditions in workhouses for the poor in Victorian England. It would be great to pair with Oliver Twist or with Blake's two "Chimney Sweep" poems.
Dana Huff

Media 21 Update: Literature Circles and Research Go Together Like Peanut Butt... - 14 views

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    Buffy shares tons of information and insights into pairing literature circles with research.
Katie Dixon

shrock_blooms.png (990×624) - 2 views

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    Great visual - would love to see it paired up with samples of uses.  Currently using Google Sites to Apply knowledge gained from reading with my 8th graders
Clifford Baker

Raymond Carver reviewed by James Campbell TLS - 0 views

  • Carver was Hemingway (most of whose fiction is located abroad) transposed to the blue-collar American margins, populated by men and women who seldom think about the world beyond – a land of bad marriages, cramped living rooms, truculent children, and unharnessed addictions of the old-fashioned sort.
  • But what is the real thing? In the original manuscript of “Why Don’t You Dance?”, before Lish’s blue pencil descended, the girl's sympathetic words to the yard sale vendor, “You must be desperate or something”, are not uttered while the pair are dancing. The sentence is adapted from an earlier remark she makes to her boyfriend when they first inspect the items for sale. “They must be desperate or something.” The vendor has yet to make an entrance. It was Lish who changed the words and placed them in her mouth as she “pushed her face into the man’s shoulder”, making it the emotional high point of the narrative.
  • As with other restored or revised texts – in this case, unrevised – the appearance of Beginners prompts some awkward questions. Does the emergence of the “real” stories undermine the reality that the most Carveresque of Carver’s books has had for almost thirty years in the minds of readers? Characters who appear sane turn out to have been mad originally. Characters who smoke didn’t do so in 1980, on their entry into the world. They are the children of Raymond Carver, but their identities were altered by the midwife, Gordon Lish.
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