Vol 2 – Special Issue (May 2026)

Trauma, Memory and Reconstruction in Anuradha Roy’s All The Lives We Never Lived
This paper explores trauma, memory, and reconstruction in Anuradha Roy’s All the Lives We Never Lived.
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Fourteen Myths, One Legend: A New Historicist Reading of The Myth of John Henry in Colson Whitehead’s John Henry Days
Myths and folklore are living records of tradition, culture, and beliefs transmitted from one generation to the next. The prologue of Colson Whitehead’s John Henry Days (2001) presents fourteen variations of the myth of John Henry.
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Optimism and Pessimism in the Fictions of Franz Kafka
The fiction of Franz Kafka is widely recognized for its intense portrayal of anxiety, alienation, absurdity, and existential despair. His protagonists often find themselves trapped within incomprehensible systems of authority, burdened by obscure accusations, and subjected to oppressive bureaucratic structures, that seem both impersonal and omnipotent.
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Trauma and Memory in Toni Morrison’s Beloved
This paper examines the human mind in Beloved, written by Toni Morrison. The novel shows how past trauma affects a person's thoughts, emotions, and identity.
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Reconstructing the Self Through Crime Narrative: Trauma and Psychoanalytic Perspectives in Patricia Cornwell’s Cruel and Unusual
This crime narrative is examined through trauma and psychoanalytic perspectives in Cruel and Unusual (1993) by Patricia Cornwell, the fourth novel in the Kay Scarpetta forensic crime series. Through the protagonist of Dr. Kay Scarpetta, the Chief Medical Examiner exposes how reality is sometimes buried by political pressure and human error.
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Listening to the Heart, Shaping the Mind-set: A Study of Don’t Leave Anything for Later: Stop Waiting, Start Living
Life is a journey that moves toward an inevitable end, and this awareness gives meaning to human choices andactions. This paper explores how Don’t Leave Anything for Later: Stop Waiting, Start Living encourages readers to reflect on life,mortality, and personal growth.
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From Implied Reader to Moral Actor: Reconfiguring Narrative Consciousness in Video Games
This paper explores how video game storytelling reshapes the connection between the human psyche and narrative by bringing immersion and moral choice together.
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Psychological Conflict, Subjectivity, and the Divided Self: A Psychoanalytic Inquiry into Freud, and Lacan
This paper explores psychological conflict and the formation of subjectivity through the psychoanalytic concept of the divided self, drawing on the theoretical frameworks of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan. 
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Borrowed Visions: Psychedelics, Power, and Indigenous Knowledge in the Beat Literary Imagination
The Beat Generation is known for their quest for spontaneous expression and altered forms of spiritual consciousness. Known for using psychedelics and other illicit substances, Beatniks revered deviancy not only in their lives but also in their craft. Their works often featured these substances as a thematic concern, or were...
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The Human Psyche as Belief Revision: A Bayesian Study of Modern Poetry
This paper explores the representation of the human psyche in “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”by T. S. Eliot and “Notes on the Reality of the Self” from The End of Beauty by Jorie Graham.
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