Yare slowly dragged the whetstone across his blade. Nara, tired from the journey, was slumped across a large root, her body heaving with her deep breaths. Yare knew his sword sharpening didn’t disturb her sleep—she had become used to the sound over the many years of traveling together. Even so, Yare tried to angle the … Continue reading Campfire
Fainting in a Shop
Opening the door to the shop, Cane felt as if he might faint. The guy behind the counter saw him stumble and quickly ran over to help Cane up. “Ah, get up, droske. That’s it.” The shopkeeper walked Cane over to a stool just across from the counter. He wiped off the … Continue reading Fainting in a Shop
The House
Dre walked inside the old, decaying house. It was abandoned by a family who moved away years ago. It hadn’t been touched since. The house had succumbed to nature in its age; vines held the house down on its foundation, and animals had gnawed holes in the walls. But the door for humans was … Continue reading The House
A Deconstructive Analysis of “The Birth-Mark” by Nathaniel Hawthorne
Hawthorne’s “The Birth-Mark” is the story of a Frankenstein-esque scientist attempting to remove a crimson birthmark from his wife’s otherwise pale face. This short story, filled with moral ambiguity and pseudo-alchemy, can be analyzed for its faulty ideology by taking a Deconstructive approach. A close look at this text reveals hypocritical binary oppositions, multiple … Continue reading A Deconstructive Analysis of “The Birth-Mark” by Nathaniel Hawthorne
Considering the Need for Stability in Both a Modernist and Harlem Renaissance Piece: How These Characters Find a Sense of Security in Troubled Times
The Modernist movement and the Harlem Renaissance were both times of extreme change. Both movements came out of the horrific events of WWI, and were products of the shifts that occurred, which changed how people saw literature, religion, history, and even their own identities. It’s no surprise that the literature of the period, written … Continue reading Considering the Need for Stability in Both a Modernist and Harlem Renaissance Piece: How These Characters Find a Sense of Security in Troubled Times
The Necessary Question
In my fairly limited experience with philosophy, it seems that no other question seems to have trumped an entire discipline as much as the question: “What is the meaning of life?”. Not only does every great philosopher attempt in their own way to answer this question, but the question also appears in popular movies … Continue reading The Necessary Question
Identity in Nella Larsen’s Passing: How the Repression of Identity Can Create Violent Effects
Nella Larsen, in her novel Passing, creates an interesting and eye-opening medium through which we can analyze the complex topic of identity and self-identification. The characters in Passing all have a unique relationship to their own identities, as they are molded by the identities society wants them to have, and as they interact with … Continue reading Identity in Nella Larsen’s Passing: How the Repression of Identity Can Create Violent Effects
Confronting Death in Modernist Poems: Analysis of cummings’ “Buffalo Bill’s” and Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”
The Modernist movement was a response to the horrors that occurred during WWI by artists and philosophers who chased meaning after the senseless and horrible violence. The war reshaped how people perceived religion, literature, history, culture, and even their own identities. Modernist poetry was an attempt to reclaim a sense of meaning that seemed absent … Continue reading Confronting Death in Modernist Poems: Analysis of cummings’ “Buffalo Bill’s” and Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”
A New Critic’s Analysis of "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost
“Mending Wall” by Robert Frost is a poem about two neighbors who continuously repair a wall between their properties. In the poem, the speaker points out the irony in the wall being there, since it is not necessary, and the other neighbor maintains that the wall should be kept up because it is a tradition … Continue reading A New Critic’s Analysis of "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost
A Marxist Analysis of “Harlem” by Langston Hughes
Marxist Analysis is a way of analyzing literature through the scope of Karl Marx’s ideas about the alienation of labor, the flaws of a base economy, and ideologies that help the bourgeoisie maintain societal control over the proletariat. This analysis is useful to examine pieces of literature that make social commentary about problems with the … Continue reading A Marxist Analysis of “Harlem” by Langston Hughes