This week, we’ll have more short MC POP ditties and introduce the Ning group feature. It looks like Ning is doing some redesign, so we all have slime green duct tape slapped across the header of our homepage. I guess it is cool as it prods you to
invite friends but methinks it will need some aesthetic changes after
Teach, Think, Play.
Speaking of green, those of you who saw
I Love You, Man this weekend had a chance to catch the original TV hulk, Lou Ferigno on the big screen. While I did happen to see that film I also made a new green acquaintance - Mini-Hulk. He’s a featured in the
Mini-Marvels comic series. They have published this title for ten years but I was hipped to the series a month ago when I saw this awesome Wolverine cover on display at
Forbidden Planet here in NYC:
With all the rage about
Watchmen and its send up of the superhero genre, these
Mini-Marvels fall on the other end of the self-reflexivity spectrum as a cute genre parody. I think the series if great for kids of all ages. On a basic level you can use them to engage kids in reading and as a springboard to discuss and explore adolescent issues. On a higher level,
Mini-Marvels, like
Watchmen, is worthy of study if you’re interested in looking carefully at parody and genre conventions in a literature class.
TANGENT: John C. Weaver teaches
Watchmen and made a
blog post about it. Hopefully, he’ll add a hyperlink to the article about his teaching so we can read more about his work!
Anyway, in the
Mini-Marvel collection I was reading Black Bolt, leader of the superhero group The Illuminators decided to exile Hulk to another planet by sending him on a mission in a sabotaged spacecraft. Why, you ask? Because – well, they didn’t like him – after all, these
are kid superheroes. Unfortunately, they forgot that that Hulk’s alter ego, Dr. Bruce Banner, is a genius who just happened to be capable of repairing the broken spaceship and returning to Earth. Upon his return he drops ANGRY HAIKU!
Awesome cartoon pasted here, as always, for educational use only!
This sequence made me laugh so loud because who hasn’t watched students (and adults) struggle with the syllable structure of Haiku.
If you enjoy poetry and popular culture, don’t forget to check out the
visual poetry wiki page, this
poetic post, and please join the newly created “
Poetry People” MC pop group.
I’m trying to roll out new groups for people to join. These clusters allow folks with similar interests (usually by teaching discipline or pop genre) to communicate around the topics and resources they use to make curriculum pop. When you’re in a group it allows for more flexibility then the regular interface since you can broadcast messages to everyone in that group.
If you like a group
Where Poetry People are
Quickly,
click, join now!
Ryan- not so Basho - Goble