Posts

Showing posts from June, 2025

Flipped Learning Activity: Derrida and Deconstruction

Image
 This blog task is given by Dilip Barad Sir,  What is Flipped Learning?  Flipped Learning is a pedagogical approach in which direct instruction moves from the group learning space to the individual learning space, and the resulting group pace is transformed into a dynamic, interactive learning environment where the educator guides students as they apply concepts and engage creatively in the subject matter. (Flipped Learning Network (FLN))  Teacher's blog Introduction:  This blog offers a simple yet insightful look into Jacques Derrida’s concept of Deconstruction, a theory that questions fixed meanings and challenges how we understand language, literature, and truth. I’ve also embedded a helpful video lecture that clearly explains these ideas. The video adds depth to the blog and helps make deconstruction easier to grasp for all readers. Video 1: This video explains deconstruction, a complex idea by the philosopher Jacques Derrida. many people think deconstructio...

Novella: Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka

Image
  What is a Novella? A novella is a short work of fiction — usually between 20,000 and 40,000 words. It has more depth than a short story but isn’t as long or complex as a novel. Full details: Title: The Metamorphosis (Original German: Die Verwandlung) Author: Franz Kafka Published: 1915 Genre: Modernist literature Absurdist fiction Existential fiction Psychological fiction Often categorized as a novella Franz Kafka’s most iconic and unsettling novellas. The story opens with a bizarre, unforgettable scene: Gregor Samsa, a young traveling salesman, wakes up to find himself transformed into a “monstrous vermin.” That one surreal moment sets the tone for an entire narrative that blends the absurd, the tragic, and the deeply philosophical. Despite its brevity, the book leaves a lasting impact on readers — making it a cornerstone of modernist literature and existential thought. What’s It All About? Gregor Samsa is the sole breadwinner of his middle-class family. One morning, he wakes u...

Book Review of: Tagore’s Ghare Baire

Image
  Some stories aren’t just meant to be read — they are meant to be felt, questioned, and remembered. Rabindranath Tagore’s Ghare Baire (The Home and the World) is one such novel. Published in 1916, the book captures not only the political chaos of early 20th-century Bengal but also the personal storms that brew inside homes and hearts. A Love Triangle Amidst a Nation’s Awakening At its core, Ghare Baire is about three people — Nikhil, a gentle, rational aristocrat; Bimala, his idealistic wife; and Sandip, a fiery nationalist and Nikhil’s charismatic friend. But the story doesn’t remain confined to their emotional entanglements. Instead, it unfolds like a complex tapestry where personal love, patriotism, betrayal, and identity clash and blend. Bimala, who has spent most of her life within the protective shell of her home, is encouraged by Nikhil to step into the world — to find her own truth. Enter Sandip, a man who speaks the language of passion, politics, and swadeshi (self-relian...