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Memory

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The Minimal Poem: the fascination with the one-line verse and its immediate effect on memory

A short defense of the one line poem as a precise instrument for memory and attention, where rhythm does the carrying, editing does the caring, and the reader brings the rest so that a single breath can hold a room.


1984 by George Orwell: how reality is manufactured

A close reading of 1984 that follows how power trims language, trains memory to accept revision, and domesticates fear, while arguing that small acts of attention and ordinary tenderness still make a real breach.


Poetry in the age of the scroll: how the poem changes when it is born on a screen

An essay on how vertical reading reshapes the pulse of poetry, asking for precision in every cut and images that endure beyond the feed, so the screen becomes another home where language can breathe with its readers.


The Useless Art of Underlining for the Joy of Reading

This article reflects on how the culture of productivity has invaded even our bookshops and proposes a simple yet subversive gesture: reading slowly, underlining without reason and giving the book back its living and unpredictable disorder.