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.

Silence, Memory, and Unreliable Retrospection: A Narratological Study of The Remains of the Day

1. Introduction: Narration Under Constraint The Remains of the Day offers a radically different narratological configuration from the expansive fragmentation of historiographic metafiction. Here, narrative is not excessive but restrained; not proliferating but withholding. The novel constructs meaning through silence, suppression, and retrospective self-justification. From a narratological perspective, the text is a masterclass in unreliable […]

Silence, Memory, and Unreliable Retrospection: A Narratological Study of The Remains of the Day Read More »

Memory, Trauma, and Disrupted Storytelling: A Narratological Study of Beloved

1. Introduction: Narrative Under the Pressure of Memory Beloved represents one of the most powerful explorations of how narrative is reshaped under the force of traumatic memory. From a narratological perspective, the novel does not simply recount past events; it dramatizes the breakdown of conventional narrative structure under the weight of historical trauma. Set in

Memory, Trauma, and Disrupted Storytelling: A Narratological Study of Beloved Read More »

Reading as Fragment and Meta-Narrative: A Narratological Study of If on a winter’s night a traveler

1. Introduction: When Narrative Becomes Its Own Subject If on a winter’s night a traveler occupies an exceptional position in narratological theory because it does not simply deploy narrative techniques—it systematically exposes them. The novel transforms narration into an object of reflection, making the act of reading itself the central thematic and structural concern. From

Reading as Fragment and Meta-Narrative: A Narratological Study of If on a winter’s night a traveler Read More »

Seduction, Language, and Narrative Power: A Comprehensive Narratological Study of Lolita

1. Introduction: Narration as Persuasion and Control Lolita stands as one of the most compelling demonstrations of narrative power in modern fiction. At its core, the novel is not merely a story about obsession and transgression; it is an intricate exploration of how narrative itself can manipulate perception, aestheticize violence, and destabilize ethical judgment. From

Seduction, Language, and Narrative Power: A Comprehensive Narratological Study of Lolita Read More »

Seduction, Language, and Narrative Control: A Narratological Study of Lolita

1. Introduction: Narration as Manipulation Lolita occupies a singular position in narratological discourse, not merely because of its controversial subject matter, but due to its extraordinary manipulation of narrative voice. The novel foregrounds a central narratological paradox: the most eloquent narrator may also be the most deceptive. In this sense, narration itself becomes an instrument

Seduction, Language, and Narrative Control: A Narratological Study of Lolita Read More »

Fragmented Time and Disintegrating Consciousness: A Narratological Inquiry into The Sound and the Fury

1. Introduction: Narrative at the Limits of Comprehension The Sound and the Fury represents one of the most radical experiments in narrative form in twentieth-century fiction. If earlier works such as Mrs Dalloway stretch narrative toward interiority, Faulkner’s novel fractures it altogether, producing a text that resists coherence, linearity, and stable meaning. From a narratological

Fragmented Time and Disintegrating Consciousness: A Narratological Inquiry into The Sound and the Fury Read More »

Time, Consciousness, and the Fluidity of Being: A Narratological Study of Mrs Dalloway

1. Introduction: Narrative Beyond Plot Mrs Dalloway marks a decisive shift in the evolution of narrative form, where the conventional emphasis on plot is displaced by an intense focus on consciousness, temporality, and perception. From a narratological perspective, the novel challenges the foundational assumptions of classical narrative theory—particularly the primacy of linear progression, external action,

Time, Consciousness, and the Fluidity of Being: A Narratological Study of Mrs Dalloway Read More »

Darkness as Discourse: Narrative Mediation and Epistemic Uncertainty in Heart of Darkness

1. Introduction: Narration at the Edge of Knowability Heart of Darkness occupies a central position in narratological discourse due to its intricate narrative layering and its profound skepticism toward the possibility of stable meaning. The novella does not merely tell a story of colonial encounter; it stages the act of storytelling itself as a problematic,

Darkness as Discourse: Narrative Mediation and Epistemic Uncertainty in Heart of Darkness Read More »

Fractured Voices and Layered Realities: A Narratological Exploration of Wuthering Heights

1. Introduction: Narrative as Enclosure and Excess Wuthering Heights stands as one of the most structurally intricate novels in the English literary canon, not merely because of its dramatic content but due to its complex narrative architecture. From a narratological standpoint, the novel offers a rich field for examining embedded narration, unreliable voices, temporal disjunctions,

Fractured Voices and Layered Realities: A Narratological Exploration of Wuthering Heights Read More »

Narratology Across Time: From Structural Foundations to Interdisciplinary Horizons

1. Introduction: Defining Narratology and Its Scope Narratology, at its most fundamental level, is the systematic study of narrative structures, mechanisms, and effects. It seeks to understand how stories are constructed, how they function, and how they produce meaning across diverse cultural, historical, and media contexts. Rather than focusing exclusively on what a story says,

Narratology Across Time: From Structural Foundations to Interdisciplinary Horizons Read More »