Student Journal (all)

Not Simply Black and White: Whiteness as a Matter of Belief in Coates’ Between the World and Me

Not Simply Black and White: Whiteness as a Matter of Belief in Coates’ Between the World and Me

Many Americans are blissfully ignorant, but Baldwin and Coates, as witnesses to the truth, use the power of words to expose American racism.

Between a Rock and a Hard Place: How the Psychological Afflictions of Plath’s Esther Greenwood and Shakespeare’s Ophelia are products of binary worlds in The Bell Jar and Hamlet

Between a Rock and a Hard Place: How the Psychological Afflictions of Plath’s Esther Greenwood and Shakespeare’s Ophelia are products of binary worlds in The Bell Jar and Hamlet

Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar and William Shakespeare’s Hamlet were written hundreds of years apart, but certain characters in the two works seem to have their lives controlled by similar conditions.

Lucretius: The Risk and Rage of the Joys and Despairs of Love

Lucretius: The Risk and Rage of the Joys and Despairs of Love

[…] instead of providing a compelling argument for such casual, detached relationships, Lucretius only highlights his own misogyny and bitterness towards women, and ignores the potential losses inherent in the life strategy he is promoting.

The Karamazov Brothers and their Discontents: A Freudian Reading of Pain and Pleasure, Aggression and Confession in Dostoevsky’s Classic Novel

The Karamazov Brothers and their Discontents: A Freudian Reading of Pain and Pleasure, Aggression and Confession in Dostoevsky’s Classic Novel

In these works, both authors show us what it is like to be human: how we are motivated by parts of ourselves we’d like to wish didn’t exist, and how most of us spend most of our lives struggling to figure out what the best way to live it is.

I’m Talking to You: Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist

I’m Talking to You: Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist

The Reluctant Fundamentalist garnered widespread acclaim as a daring attempt by Hamid to redefine the prevailing post-9/11 narrative to include the unheard, post-colonial voice while simultaneously silencing the neo-imperial voice.

The Reflection

The Reflection

In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, the characters of Victor and his creature parallel each other as they both face injustice and suffering and both resort to violent revenge.

I am Not Your Stepping Stone: An Analysis of Ethnocentric Bias in Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist

I am Not Your Stepping Stone: An Analysis of Ethnocentric Bias in Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist

In a world shocked by the horror of death and calamity that came from 9/11, Mohsin Hamid allows us to listen to the voice of a Pakistani-American during this tumultuous time.

A Faux Confession

A Faux Confession

Changez’s inherently biased prose facilitates the effective communication of his history while simultaneously conveying more obscure issues of race and prejudice that resonate with relevance.

“Thus Conscience Does Make Cowards of Us All:” Hamlet’s Freudian Sense of Guilt

“Thus Conscience Does Make Cowards of Us All:” Hamlet’s Freudian Sense of Guilt

Hamlet can be read as the prince’s struggle between Freud’s two imagined stages of the sense of guilt.

A Return to the Sea

A Return to the Sea

This essay seeks to examine the sea as a symbol of an expanded consciousness through its representation during the stages of Edna’s awakening […]