from the professor’s desk

Stream Of Consciousness :“Mind the Gap: When Writers Started Transcribing Brainstorms Live”

Stream Of Consciousness: The Literary Technique That Let Readers Eavesdrop on Thoughts They Never Asked For ABS Believes: Punctuation is optional. Logic is fluid. And narrative is just a nervous breakdown with literary footnotes. Welcome to the glorious chaos where commas go to die, and writers stop editing their brains. Imagine reading someone’s actual thoughts—unedited,

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Willing Suspension of Disbelief : When Dragons Make Sense and Dead Men Talk: The Art of Believing the Unbelievable

A Literary Trick So Smooth, Even Ghosts Got Good Reviews There once was a man who believed you could have philosophical conversations with albatrosses, write poems about ancient mariners, and still be taken seriously by 19th-century readers in top hats. His name? Samuel Taylor Coleridge. And he had a problem. Not with laudanum (well, also

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“Trophies for the Wordsmiths: When Literature Wins (and Sometimes Regrets It)”

Celebration of Prizes, Prestige, and the Publishing World’s Favourite Popularity Contest ABS Believes: A trophy doesn’t make a book timeless—but it does make it a bestseller for two weeks.Prizes are where literature meets marketing, and genius is filtered through judging panels with jetlag.But still—we cheer, we argue, we Google the winner (and promise to read

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“Sprung Rhythm: When Poetry Got Tired of Marching and Started Skipping”

Hopkins, Nursery Rhymes, and the Great Metrical Rebellion ABS Believes: Poetic rhythm shouldn’t behave like a parade. It should behave like a toddler on sugar: unpredictable, adorable, and terrifyingly free. The Meter That Misbehaved There are two types of rhythm in this world: The kind that walks into a room, straightens its tie, and recites

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“Curtain Call for Logic: A Backstage Pass to the Theatre of the Absurd”

From Godot’s Delays to Rhinoceros Rampages—Why Drama Finally Snapped ABS The Literary Scholar Believes: That when history becomes incoherent and coffee loses meaning, theatre must step in—not to explain, but to mirror the madness back with impeccable comic timing. Welcome to the Play Where Nothing Happens—and That’s the Point Let’s begin with a confession: this

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LIT Theory 008 Reader-Response Theory in Literature: When the Reader Walked In

From Silent Observer to Meaning-Maker—The Rise of the Reader in Literary Theory From The Professor’s Desk When the Reader Walked In: The Rise of Reader-Response Theory For centuries, literature was a monologue—written by the author, decoded by the critic, and quietly admired by the reader. The text was sacred, the author was sovereign, and the

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LIT Theory 007 Ecocriticism in Literature: Reading Nature as Text

From Pastoral Reverie to Planetary Grief—How Literature Listens When Nature Speaks From The Professor’s Desk The Roots Beneath the Text Literary criticism, for centuries, has walked through drawing rooms, courtrooms, battlefields, and broken hearts—but seldom through forests. While love, power, identity, and rebellion have commanded the interpretive spotlight, the rustling of leaves, the groan of

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