he's always a muscular guy
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- Aug 23 Fri 2013 11:42
he's always a muscular guy
- Aug 06 Tue 2013 12:06
The first one
When he is done, he says ‘let go.’ The one holding my throat lets go last. We are both breathing hard, but he is laughing, I am not. I feel myself collapse to the tile floor, and smack the back of my head on the floor. Everything is black, but I am not dead or unconscious, because I can still hear them laughing.”
- Aug 06 Tue 2013 11:50
his tool box
I can’t stay in one place for too long. In the distance, the sun is always reflecting off the leaves creating spiderwebs between the branches that I’m sure I’ll be able to feel one day. On the day I will finally understand the difference between the unreal and real. Until that day, I will continue to chase that line between the sky and earth. I know I’ll get there one day or I’m not Mercedes A’Lexus Ford, and I told you I was.
- Jul 22 Mon 2013 18:36
sound really terrible and judgmental
If I haven’t mentioned it, this teacher is a slacker. Our last discussion topic isn’t due until the 25th, so I assumed that she would stay true to form and we wouldn’t receive it until the 22nd. Nope, turns out she can’t even slack consistently! It’s posted! And worth double the points of all the other discussions. Whatever! I’ll take it! (Though it also happens to be obnoxiously long…)
- Jul 11 Thu 2013 15:32
Descriptions of everyday life
cao is very often assessed very unfairly, I agree. Descriptions of everyday life during the Mao era has tended in recent decades to be the domain of the memoirist. Books in the vein of Wild Swans, which you say Gao attacks, have dominated the market in Western languages, competing to present tales of suffering, persecution and determined survival. Western readersw cannot help but be moved by these stories, though few such readers are able to assess the interests behind many of these tellers of family talesstorage solution.
Most of these memoirs have been the work of Chinese whose positions of relative social and political influence were challenged by the Red Guards, and so the writing and publication of these memoirs have often been part of a re-assertion of social status and what the authors see as political propriety, even if unacknowledged by the writersHong Kong Company Secretary.
- Jul 11 Thu 2013 15:10
The Red Guards
The Red Guards, says Gao, "were not just passive followers of a charismatic leader, but agents actively involved in a variety of ideological disputes and contests for power. The Chinese were not the brainless masses manipulated by a ruthless dictator so often portrayed in the Western media. They must be seen as agents of history and subjects of their own lives like any other people. " (p.6)
- Jul 03 Wed 2013 16:34
when they find them
We will bring in 50 million to show those groups that they won't make us bow down,he said.
- Jul 03 Wed 2013 16:28
Salty Coffee
As they sat in a nice coffee shop, he was too nervous to say anything and she felt uncomfortable. Suddenly, he asked the waiter, "Could you please give me some salt? I'd like to put it in my coffee."
- Jan 25 Fri 2013 15:43
Life as shown signs of