Latest Posts
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Hemingway’s Lens:—“What Hemingway Forgot: Huck Finn is Still a Children’s Classic”
“All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn.” —Hemingway Before Mark Twain, American fiction writing was a pupil of European, particularly British for a tone. What was the European Formal Tone? It referred to… Continue reading
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Albert Camus’ Cold Absurdism vs. Philosurreal Postmodern Mystic
Albert Camus’ absurdism and Philosurreal postmodern Mystic both deal with the nature of existence, but they diverge in their approach to meaning, detachment, and the role of art. Camus, rooted in existential thought, viewed the absurd as an unresolvable conflict… Continue reading
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D. H. Lawrence vs. Philosurreal Postmodern Mystic: A Comparative Exploration
D.H. Lawrence, a seminal figure in modern literature, championed the novel as a living, organic entity. He asserted that in true art, every element—setting, theme, character—is interdependent, forming a cohesive whole that transcends mere didacticism. While acknowledging that authors might… Continue reading
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Introducing Philosurreal Postmodern Mystic
What happens when illusion is stripped from attachment? Does it dissolve into detachment, or does it refine into something purer—something more distilled? Philosurreal Postmodern Mystic is not just a manifesto; it is a poetic essay, a declaration of thought that… Continue reading








