True happiness is “innocence without heartbreak.”
Use the phrase in a piece of personal writing, a story, memoir, or poem.
True happiness is “innocence without heartbreak.”
Use the phrase in a piece of personal writing, a story, memoir, or poem.
Discuss the morality of destroying cities and their inhabitants during war. Focus on the blitz on London in 1940.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Can_Take_It!
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/theartofwar/films/london_take.htm
Write a post in which you explore your thoughts and feelings about vandalism.
Takes a side on the following: “A society deriving from a multi-cultural mosaic has distinct advantages over a society deriving from a melting pot.
Script a dialogue between two Ford workers in the 1920s after a special day on the assembly line, a day that included a visit from Ford himself.
Write a short story in which the central character is a child who gains a new insight into a parent or guardian, or in which an adult and child arrive at a mutual understanding and acceptance.
Write a light-hearted post arguing the truth of the saying “Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.”
Select a nursery rhyme and analyze it. Write a parody of your analysis in the voice of a character from the TV Show “Big Bang Theory.”
“Let me write a nation’s songs, and I care not who writes its laws.”
Much has been written of the impact on children of mass media, with their excesses of violence and sex and their distortion of reality. The trouble may start at the parents’ knee with indoctrination through nursery rhymes.
Make a list of rhymes and stories that you remember and discuss their unpleasant overtones.
For example, did you ever think of the “four and twenty blackbirds” being baked alive?