The Literary Scholar

Litsketch 6. “Love Me, Haunt Me, Destroy Me” — Catherine, Heathcliff, and the Wild Weather of Wuthering Heights

By ABS, The Literary Scholar(Who firmly believes therapy might’ve saved the Yorkshire moors a lot of emotional storm damage) Some love stories bloom in gardens. Others burn in bonfires. And then there’s Wuthering Heights—a romance so fierce it cracks windows, howls through chimneys, and demands to be resurrected at midnight with a blood oath and […]

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Litsketch 5. From Wasteland to Webland: Is Eliot Still Relevant?

By The Literary Scholar(Who believes April is still cruel, just with faster Wi-Fi.) Let’s begin with a dangerous question: Is T.S. Eliot still relevant?This is the kind of question that either sparks a spirited literary debate or gets you politely escorted out of a graduate seminar. But ask it we must—because in a world that

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Litsketch 4. Dr. Faustus: Scholar, Sinner, Showman

When the Thirst for Knowledge Burns the Soul that Seeks ItBy ABS, The Literary Scholar If Renaissance theatre had a warning label, Doctor Faustus would come with the words:“May cause damnation, disillusionment, and dark laughter. Handle with hubris.” Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus is not just the story of a man who sells his soul to

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Litsketch 3. “Out, Damned Ambition!” — Macbeth and the Murderous Mind

By ABS, The Literary Scholar(Who firmly believes that if guilt had a voice, it would quote Shakespeare with blood on its hands) Once Upon a Gory Prophecy Let us begin, as all good tragedies do, in a storm. Thunder crashes. Lightning flashes. And somewhere on a war-torn heath in medieval Scotland, three witches huddle like

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Litsketch 2. The Theatre of the Absurd: Netflix Had Nothing on This

By The Literary Scholar(Who firmly believes that if Beckett had written “Friends,” they’d still be waiting for coffee.) Let’s begin by stating the obvious: the Theatre of the Absurd is not your average evening at the theatre. There are no heroes, no villains, no gripping love triangles, and certainly no satisfying climaxes. In fact, a

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Litsketch 1. Why Hamlet Would Fail a Job Interview Today

The Literary Scholar(By ABS, who believes HR managers fear soliloquies more than salary negotiations.) “To be, or not to be…”That’s how he’d answer the first question. No “Good morning,” no handshake. Just a philosophical existential dilemma right out of the gate. And right then, HR silently underlines in red: not a team player. Let’s be

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16. From Grunts to Ghostwriters: The Glorious Evolution of English Literature

By ABS, The Literary ScholarA.K.A. The One Who Rode Through Centuries on a Comma and Edited History with a Quill  Firelight, Fury, and Four-Letter Anglo-Saxon Words English literature began not with a preface, but a growl. Somewhere between Viking raids and questionable mead, stories were born—not written, but roared around hearth fires by bearded poets

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15. Theories, Thinkers, and Things That Sound Smarter Than They Are: A Stroll Through Literary Criticism

By ABS, The Literary ScholarA.K.A. The One Who Read Between the Lines and Found Footnotes Arguing With Each Other Theoretical Disclaimer: This scroll may cause: Overthinking Aggressive footnoting Fear of metaphors Sudden bursts of clarity followed by existential dread Reader discretion is advised. Especially if you liked the book “just for the story.” Structuralism: There’s

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14. Please Do Not Adjust the Narrative: Postmodernism Will Now Be Scrambled for Your Entertainment

By ABS, The Literary ScholarA.K.A. The One Who Read the End First and Still Didn’t Understand It (But Loved It Anyway) Welcome to the Postmodern Carnival—Where Plots Spiral, Characters Sigh, and the Truth Wears a Mask If Modernism was the age of introspection, spiritual longing, and artistic melancholy, Postmodernism was the glorious after-party where the guests arrived wearing

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13. Teacups, Trauma, and Typewriters That Stream Consciousness: The Moderns, Continued

By ABS, The Literary ScholarA.K.A. The One Who Waited for Godot and Brought Biscuits Just in Case After the Shouting, the Silence We had barely patched up the rubble left by the war when literature decided to take off its emotional corset and spiral inward. The early 20th century had already given us Yeats’s spirals,

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