dryeye: icon @ <user name=myboringicons site=tumblr.com> (i don't look like i got attacked)
Shouta Aizawa / "Eraserhead" ([personal profile] dryeye) wrote2017-06-26 09:44 pm

INBOX

SHOUTA AIZAWA
If you're trying to contact me about class related issues please use the email listed on your syllabus.


VOICE | TEXT | VIDEO | ACTION
openhanded: (animated) (☆nothing can change what happened)

[personal profile] openhanded 2017-09-16 07:29 pm (UTC)(link)
[LET HIM LIVE]

I can't help panicked typing when I'm talking to my teacher!!! even if you're not my teacher anymore ....

[ J F C ]

er. no. this is for our book club. I don't think I could turn this in for classwork even if I wanted to

[It's nsfw and also really, really bad. He wishes he could lie about it but he's just... not going to try. He knows how that goes.]

vampires have been a trend in young adult fiction for a while though
openhanded: (game) (☆you think it'll burst apart)

[personal profile] openhanded 2017-09-17 07:57 am (UTC)(link)
[... Sorey isn't going to explain cry-typing to his old teacher, it's not going to happen.]

okay but I work at the high school so... not offending you is kind of important to my continued employment

they're usually not, but I couldn't wait until Thursday to tell Kiyomitsu about it haha
[He's always been a shade impatient, though.]

I honestly can't really imagine you being into vampires, Mr. Aizawa! you don't seem like a fantasy guy to me. maybe you'd like reading historical fiction? if anything.

or maybe something like Guns Germs and Steel? that's about the history of human society.
Edited 2017-09-17 07:58 (UTC)
openhanded: (animated) (☆but hold me still)

[personal profile] openhanded 2017-09-21 03:49 am (UTC)(link)
[He's just not going to correct him at this point; an essay sounds better than the truth.]

I'll make sure to do that! I want to make sure he reads the books after all.

maybe it's a compliment?? vampires are pale and dark haired at their most archetypal, but there's usually a romantic connotation to the stories as well. specifically of the forbidden type

it's really not an opposite concept at all. it's less dry than a history book, and it allows readers to get a feeling for the mannerisms and culture of a place because they're interacting with the material instead of memorizing it. the scarlet letter, the last of the mohicans, the three musketeers, the hunchback of Notre Dame, war and peace... those are just some examples

guns isn't fiction but it does make history interesting to read. it's the difference between an overview and looking at the big picture. basically it's a book written to answer the question of why some societies developed more technology than others and geography was the conclusion he came to.

I thought it was pretty interesting! though always take what you read with a grain of salt, obviously.
openhanded: (animated) (☆take me there)

[personal profile] openhanded 2017-09-25 03:28 am (UTC)(link)
garlic is a very good thing.

yeah, essentially! sometimes what happens isn't always that fabricated. a good example is a book published in the late 1600s that was based off the French court. it was called La Princesse de Montpensier. many of the details have held up to historian scrutiny, including some private details, which suggests it was written by someone inside the court... generally accepted to be Madame de La Fayette.

I try to read when I'm on my lunch break instead of messing around on my phone. it seems to help!