Professor’s Desk

Middle English Period (1066–1480) — Poetic Visions, Religious Voices, and Drama of the Middle English Mind

Poetic Visions, Religious Voices, and The Drama of the Middle English Mind From The Professor’s Desk Beyond Chaucer’s towering influence, the later Middle English period witnessed an extraordinary flowering of literary voices — each contributing in distinctive ways to the evolution of English thought and expression. This was an age when knightly ideals, moral allegory, […]

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Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343-1400) Middle English Period

Middle English Period 1066-1400 AD Part 2 Geoffrey Chaucer and the Flowering of Middle English Literature From The Professor’s Desk In any history of English literature, certain figures stand as defining voices of their age — and in the Middle English period, none looms larger than Geoffrey Chaucer. Born in the early 1340s, Chaucer lived

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AusLit-3 Outback, Outrage, and the Urban Shift: The Many Moods of Modern OzLit

From Indigenous power to postcolonial punchlines, gender rebellions to literary reinventions—Australia writes with bite now. By ABS, who believes that modern Australian fiction has learned to throw boomerangs made of metaphor—and they rarely miss. f early Australian literature was written on the backs of convicts and mid-century fiction was dipped in despair, then modern AusLit

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AfriLit-5. Diaspora Diaries: When African Writers Boarded Planes but Never Left Home

Migration, Memory, and the Global Gaze on African Pain—Exported, Exoticized, and Finally Explained From ABS, Who Believes that exile can write better novels than comfort ever will. Some left by choice.Some were pushed.Some boarded planes, only to find that customs didn’t check for grief, and memory couldn’t be declared. This is the African literary diaspora:

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AfriLit-1: When the Empire Brought a Pen and Took the Land

Colonialism, Culture Clashes, and Why Chinua Achebe Had Every Right to Be Annoyed From ABS, Who Believes stories survive empires, but sarcasm survives history. It begins, as most tragic tales do, with someone arriving uninvited. Long before PowerPoint presentations and TED Talks about “cultural sensitivity,” colonial powers marched into Africa with swords, Bibles, and the

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