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As an English Professor, this is what I do the most — my area of expertise.

Formal Verse Satire

A satiric mode developed by the Roman poets Lucilius, Horace, Persius, and Juvenal. The formal verse satire is generally considered the only species, or sub-genre, of the genus satire to possess any kind of identifiable or consistent form. The Roman formal verse satire consists of an outer frame or “shell” made up of the satirist, [...]

Life in Prison?

Life in Prison?

Not taking into account the obvious impossibility of answering such a question, having been raised with a proverbial silver spoon — at least for the first part of my life — and being a somewhat typical American where fitness is concerned, i.e. totally out-of-shape, I cannot, literally, for the life of me, answer this question [...]

Bulgakov and Pasternak

Bulgakov and Pasternak

While both Bulgakov and Pasternak share social, national, and cultural concerns, their similarities seem to lie on a deeper, more subtle, level. Their respect for the artist and his/her creative spirit, drive to propagate their beliefs, and individuality far outweigh, in their respective views, the concerns of society and its assumed moral stances and degradation. [...]

Notes on Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter

Notes on Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter

Hawthorne, like Poe and Melville, is a pessimistic Romantic. His writing is deceptively simplistic on the surface, but his subtle philosophy can be divined through a close reading — anything simple is an illusion. Hawthorne separates the reader from the action as much as possible (e.g. arachaic language, third-person narrative, time displacement) wanting the reader [...]

Unpardonable Sin

Hawthorne’s Unpardonable Sin, the violation of the “sanctity of the human heart,” is a reflection of Shelley’s Frankenstein. Whether it takes the form of intellectual pride, cold manipulation and observation, or the estrangement of the individual from humanity, the Unpardonable Sin becomes the impetus of the sinner’s suffering and destruction, while at the same time serves as a vehicle for enlightenment.

Zamyatin, Babel, Olesha

Zamyatin, Babel, Olesha

With the beginning of the twentieth century in Russia, strains of naturalism begin to take shape within Russian literature. With this propensity towards deterministic environs, perhaps experiments with new types of fiction that transcend established conventions — a metafiction — is a natural evolutionary step. Zamyatin’s, Babel’s, and Olesha’s works contain naturalistic elements and can [...]