How Jane Austen’s novel Pride & Prejudice portrays different types of marriages

Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice is a novel that explores the societal pressure on women to marry for financial security and status. The novel portrays different types of marriages, including those based on love, convenience, and social status. The marriages in the novel can be seen as a reflection of the society in which Austen … Read more

Triangle, The Fire That Changed America – David Von Drehle

Triangle, The Fire That Changed America written by David Von Drehle. Drehle an author and journalist, born in Denver, Colorado on February 6, 1961. He received his bachelors from the University of Denver, later pursuing and graduating from Oxford University with a masters in literature. Triangle, which was published in 2004, described the events that … Read more

Langston Hughes – Harlem

Upon first sight of Langston Hughes famous 1950’s poem, you catch a title loaded with antecedent implications into the history of a city, but most importantly the culture that made this city a hub for African American history. Immediately we are taken into the drop back of Harlem and, at the time written, the tension … Read more

Robert Worth – A Rage for Order

Robert Worth, a longtime NYT journalist and bureau chief in the Middle East, was at Tahrir on that day when Egyptians rediscovered their country and their fellow citizens. There is a vivid and thrilling, almost dreamy, chapter on those eighteen days in Tahrir, where shared experiences had forged friendships and understanding between people of disparate … Read more

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair

The Jungle, a novel written by Upton Sinclair, illustrates the United States’ living conditions in a capitalist society. Today, years after its publication, the United States is known to be a predominantly capitalist nation due to the fact that it is seen as the best economically and socially sustainable option by many individuals. On the … Read more

“Perfume: The Story of a Murderer” by Patrick Süskind

In this essay, I am going to analyse Patrick Süskind’s application of olfactory imagery to enhance the plot of the book, “Perfume: The Story of a Murderer”, whilst citing specific incidences from various chapters of the book. Olfactory imagery is the figurative or descriptive language in a literary work pertaining to odours, scents, or the … Read more

The Color of Water

Searching for a place to belong and an identity is a universal quest. Many people find belonging and understanding of the self within communities of religion, culture, or language. Others, however, do not easily fit in with any community, and as a result are forced to wander until they find their own home. This situation … Read more

Toni Morrison – The Bluest Eye

Toni Morrison’s debut novel The Bluest Eye, published in 1970, tells the story of a young African American girl by the name of Pecola Breedlove, who wishes for blue eyes. Set in Lorain, Ohio, during the Great Depression, the book relies on flashbacks of a number of different characters to skilfully narrate the story of … Read more

Le Crépuscule du soir

This poem is from a book, Les Fleurs du mal, a volume of poems written by Charles Baudelaire. This poem comes from the section Tableaux Parisiens. This section of the book depicts a day-night cycle in Paris, starting with Le Soleil and ending with Le Crépuscule du Matin. The majority of these poems were written … Read more

The Cross and the Lynching Tree – James Cone

As a African American man himself, James Cone has dealt with his own crosses to bear such as the untimely death of his wife and the anxiety of waiting for his father to come home after dark in a hostile racist world. His experiences prompted him to contemplate “Why is there suffering?”. “The Cross and … Read more

J.R.R. Tolkien – “The Silmarillion”

The aim of this work is to analyze of J.R.R. Tolkien’s book “The Silmarillion”, which is about the creation of the Middle Earth, and “The Lord of the Rings”, which describes the upheads of the world in his fictional universe, in terms of their obvious inspiration by the motives of Greek Mythology and Norse Mythology … Read more

Sheridan Le Fanu’s short story Green Tea

The nineteenth century saw a rapid change in scientific thought and art alike. Darwin’s theory of evolution brought about both modern ways of looking at the world, but also exacerbated anxieties and superstitions regarding the old way of thought. In a time when men sought to expand their knowledge of the world there came about … Read more