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.

Stylistic Analysis of The Great Gatsby: Narrative Mediation, Symbolic Lexicon, and the Rhetoric of American Desire

1. Stylistic Framework: Language, Narration, and Illusion The stylistic study of The Great Gatsby focuses on how F. Scott Fitzgerald constructs meaning through mediated narration, symbolic lexical patterns, and carefully controlled tonal variation. The novel is a key example of modern American prose style in which narration is both descriptive and interpretive, producing a layered […]

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Stylistic Analysis of 1984: Linguistic Control, Dystopian Discourse, and the Grammar of Political Power

1. Stylistic Framework: Language as Political Instrument The stylistic study of 1984 focuses on how George Orwell constructs a linguistic system in which language is directly engineered as an instrument of political control. Unlike modernist or postmodern stylistic fragmentation, this text organizes linguistic structure around restriction, simplification, and ideological containment. From a stylistic perspective, the

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Stylistic Analysis of Beloved: Fragmented Memory, Narrative Disruption, and the Language of Historical Trauma

1. Stylistic Framework: Language, Memory, and Trauma Representation The stylistic study of Beloved focuses on how Toni Morrison constructs narrative meaning through fragmentation, shifting focalization, and lexical repetition. The novel is a central example of trauma stylistics, where language is shaped by the psychological and historical aftereffects of slavery. From a stylistic perspective, the text

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Stylistic Analysis of The God of Small Things: Code-Switching, Nonlinear Syntax, and the Poetics of Trauma in Narrative Structure

1. Stylistic Framework: Language, Memory, and Narrative Experimentation The stylistic study of The God of Small Things focuses on how Arundhati Roy constructs meaning through fragmented narration, lexical innovation, and syntactic disruption. The novel is a key example of postcolonial stylistics in which language is used not only to tell a story but to enact

Stylistic Analysis of The God of Small Things: Code-Switching, Nonlinear Syntax, and the Poetics of Trauma in Narrative Structure Read More »

Stylistic Analysis of Heart of Darkness: Narrative Framing, Lexical Ambiguity, and the Discourse of Imperial Perception

1. Stylistic Framework: Language, Perception, and Narrative Mediation The stylistic study of Heart of Darkness focuses on how Joseph Conrad constructs meaning through layered narration, ambiguous lexical choices, and controlled disruption of narrative transparency. The text is a central example of stylistic mediation, where meaning is never directly presented but filtered through multiple narrative voices.

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Stylistic Analysis of Mrs Dalloway: Stream of Consciousness, Free Indirect Discourse, and the Linguistic Mapping of Urban Consciousness

1. Stylistic Framework: Language, Mind, and Modernist Representation The stylistic study of Mrs Dalloway centers on how Virginia Woolf constructs consciousness through linguistic form. Unlike traditional realist narration, the novel replaces linear storytelling with a fluid representation of thought, perception, and memory. From a stylistic perspective, the text is a key example of stream of

Stylistic Analysis of Mrs Dalloway: Stream of Consciousness, Free Indirect Discourse, and the Linguistic Mapping of Urban Consciousness Read More »

Stylistic Analysis of The Waste Land: Fragmentation, Register Instability, and the Linguistic Architecture of Modernist Meaning

1. Stylistic Framework and Methodological Orientation The stylistic examination of The Waste Land operates within a descriptive-analytical model of discourse analysis, foregrounding how linguistic form constructs meaning in conditions of cultural and epistemic rupture. Stylistics, as applied here, is not limited to surface ornamentation but is understood as the systematic study of lexical choice, syntactic

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Postcolonial Reading of Wide Sargasso Sea: Colonial Madness, Creole Identity, and the Imperial Archive of Silence

1. Historical and Discursive Context The novel Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys emerges in the mid-twentieth-century postcolonial moment as a deliberate counter-text to canonical English literature, particularly Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre. It intervenes in the imperial literary archive by rewriting the “madwoman in the attic” as a historically situated subject shaped by colonial displacement,

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Postcolonial Reading of Things Fall Apart: Epistemic Collision, Colonial Administration, and the Unmaking of Indigenous Order

1. Historical and Discursive Context The novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe emerges from the mid-twentieth-century postcolonial intellectual project, particularly the urgent need to rewrite African history from within African epistemologies rather than colonial ethnographic framing. Written in 1958, the text intervenes in a long colonial archive dominated by anthropological accounts that represented Igbo

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New Historicist Reading of Hamlet: Sovereignty Crisis, Surveillance Culture, and the Theatrical Production of Political Subjectivity

1. Historical and Discursive Context The tragedy Hamlet by William Shakespeare emerges from the late Elizabethan and early Jacobean transition, a period defined by anxieties surrounding monarchical succession, the consolidation of state power, religious conflict after the Reformation, and the emergence of early modern surveillance practices within court culture. The play is not simply a

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