• Thank you very much | Diolch yn fawr

    All at JackArmy.net would like to thank everyone who has played a part on this site over the past 25 years whether that is through writing, contributing, moderating, posting or just visting and reading.

    Without any of you the work that has gone into the site would have been pointless and we will always be proud that we built, generated and managed a community that was such a big part of the Swansea City supporting life for so long.

    It has been a pleasure to bring to you the site for so long but the time is now right to turn the lights out for the last time but we do it both with a heavy heart and a sense of pride driven by the so many messages received since we announced the closure.

    The site will remain here for a period until we archive and mothball it for the last time later this summer but all aspects are in a read only format.

    Thank you though for all the memories

    Phil Sumbler
    Owner, jackarmy.net

Of mice and men

  • Thread starter Thread starter rockinj
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Privileged white boy against scrapping something which is deeply hurtful to others.

Shock.
 
As Smurph points out above, plenty of great literature around that can both be a great example of storytelling and not make some kids feel gratuitously uncomfortable.

Of Mice and Men was part of my GCSE english 30 odd years ago. It was alright. Would rather it was replaced by something written by a welsh author or something that might engage today's kids more than Great Depression america does. It's not exactly a classic of British/Welsh culture kids are missing out on here.

And before someone chirps in with 'great art is supposed to make people uncomfortable', that's why I added the word 'gratuitously'. You can study something that makes you reflect on uncomfortable ideas without the 'of its time' language in it causing an unnecessary distraction. Stick a fork in it and use something else.
 
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My youngest son studied it for GCSE 2 years ago along with Heroes, another depressing tome.

I thought this summed up the book well in a precis:

 

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