letsfindtruth12@gmail.com

I hold a PhD in English Language and Literature, with a specialization in modern literary theory. I have over ten years of experience in university-level teaching and research, with a sustained focus on critical theory and its intersections with culture, history, and subjectivity. My scholarly interests extend to philosophy, comparative religion, and psychology, fields that inform and enrich my engagement with literary studies. My work explores how literature and theory interrogate meaning, power, identity, and the limits of language.

Archive, Secrecy, and Queer Self-Construction: A Queer-Theoretical Study of Fun Home

1. Introduction: Queer Identity as Reconstruction of the Past Fun Home is a foundational queer autobiographical text because it reframes identity not as discovery or declaration, but as retrospective construction through archival fragments. The memoir does not present a stable narrative of coming out; instead, it assembles queer subjectivity through memory, documentation, family history, and […]

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Grief, Isolation, and Queer Everyday Life: A Queer-Theoretical Study of A Single Man

1. Introduction: Queer Life Beyond Crisis Narratives A Single Man is a pivotal text for queer theory because it shifts attention from “coming out” narratives, repression, or erotic discovery toward an often overlooked domain: queer ordinariness shaped by grief and isolation. The novel does not dramatize sexual identity as scandal or transformation; instead, it examines

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Queer Temporality, Memory, and Ephemeral Desire: A Queer-Theoretical Study of Call Me by Your Name

1. Introduction: Queer Desire as Temporal Experience Call Me by Your Name is a central contemporary text for queer theory because it relocates queer experience from secrecy or repression into temporality itself. The novel does not primarily focus on identity politics or social conflict; instead, it constructs queer desire as a phenomenon of time, memory,

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Aestheticism, Secret Desire, and Moral Panic: A Queer-Theoretical Study of The Picture of Dorian Gray

1. Introduction: Queer Aesthetics Under Moral Surveillance The Picture of Dorian Gray occupies a foundational position in queer theory because it encodes non-normative desire through aesthetics, symbolism, and moral allegory rather than explicit representation. Written in a cultural context of Victorian moral rigidity, the novel constructs queerness as encrypted desire: visible in style, affect, and

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Desire, Shame, and Exile: A Queer-Theoretical Study of Giovanni’s Room

1. Introduction: Queer Theory and the Politics of Intimate Ruin Giovanni’s Room is one of the most analytically dense texts for queer theory because it dismantles the myth of stable heterosexual identity through the structures of desire, repression, and social exile. Unlike narratives that celebrate queer emergence, this novel constructs queerness through crisis: fragmented identity,

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Queer Temporality, Gender Fluidity, and Narrative Transformation: A Queer-Theoretical Study of Orlando

1. Introduction: Orlando and the Problem of Fixed Identity Orlando is one of the most structurally radical texts for queer theory because it dismantles the stability of gender, time, and identity simultaneously. Rather than presenting identity as coherent or biologically fixed, the novel constructs subjectivity as historically mobile, socially performed, and ontologically unstable. From a

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Tidal Memory, Displacement, and Human–Nonhuman Entanglement: A Comparative Ecocritical Study of The Hungry Tide

1. Introduction: River Ecologies and the Ethics of Fragile Worlds The Hungry Tide occupies a central position in South Asian ecocriticism because it refuses to treat ecology as stable landscape. Instead, it constructs the Sundarbans as a continuously shifting system of water, mud, mangroves, and human precarity. Unlike pastoral or wilderness traditions, this text situates

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Monsoon Worlds, River Violence, and Climate Capitalism: An Ecocritical Study of The Great Derangement

1. Introduction: Ecocriticism and the Crisis of Literary Imagination The Great Derangement is a landmark intervention in contemporary ecocritical thought because it shifts attention from fictional representation of climate change to the structural incapacity of modern literature to imagine climate catastrophe. Unlike traditional novels or nature writing, this text operates as a hybrid form: part

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Climate Visibility, Species Disruption, and Rural Epistemology: An Ecocritical Study of Flight Behavior

1. Introduction: When Climate Becomes Visible Flight Behavior occupies a crucial position in ecocritical discourse because it stages climate change not as abstract scientific discourse but as sensory and visible ecological disruption. The novel shifts ecocriticism from distant environmental crisis models toward immediate perception: climate becomes something that can be seen, misread, denied, and gradually

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Interwoven Lives, Insect Worlds, and Ecological Desire: An Ecocritical Study of Prodigal Summer

1. Introduction: Ecocriticism Beyond Human Centrality Prodigal Summer occupies a distinctive place in contemporary ecocritical fiction because it dismantles the separation between human emotional life and ecological systems. Unlike dystopian or catastrophic environmental narratives, this novel constructs ecology as continuity, intimacy, and interdependence across species, landscapes, and human desire. Ecocritically, the text is significant because

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