stream of consciousness

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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Fiction & Short Stories in English Literature

Quick Access To the Four Master Scrolls Drama and Theatre in English Literature  Poetry in English Literature  Fiction and Short Stories in English Literature  Non Fiction and Prose in English Literature The Origin and Rise of Fiction in English Literature Fiction in English literature has a rich and varied history that spans centuries. Its origin

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4. Modernist literature between wars “Ashes, Absurdities, and Atomic Echoes: Literature Between the Wars and the Void”

Literature between War and Whisper: The Final Phase of Modernism (1939–1959) From The Professor’s Desk When literature walks through the fire, it seldom comes out unburnt.The years 1939 to the late 1950s represent not a neat ending, but a scorched continuum of modernism — disillusioned by one war, scarred by another, and finally entrapped in

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3. Modernist literature between World Wars : After the Guns Fell Silent

3. Modernism : After the Guns Fell Silent — Literature Between Wars A world trying to forget. A literature that refused to. From The Professor’s Desk The war was over. But the wound was not. Modernist literature between World Wars The year was 1919. Europe was exhausted—physically, spiritually, artistically. The battlefield had fallen quiet, but

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2. Modernist literature and World War I (1914–1919)

From The Professor’s Desk The Great War did not only kill men. It mutilated meaning. The year was 1914. The sun never set on the British Empire, and across Europe, proud nations paraded their flags to the rhythms of certainty and superiority. It was a world—arrogant, armored, and unsuspecting—marching straight into its own unmaking. In

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