In The Secret History, Richard, Camilla, and Bunny fabricate identities in an attempt to fit in, only to be overcome by tragedy, loneliness, and illusion.
Category: Analysis and Essay (Page 4 of 46)
In FLCL, adolescence is portrayed not as a linear journey toward maturity but as a chaotic collision of identity, desire, and absurdity.
After that horrible night, laughter not only serves as a continual reminder to Clamence that his existence is ridiculous, but it also becomes the phantom of hypocrisy that he is unable to shake.
Echoing Ovidian metamorphosis as a means of self-erasure and emancipation, Yeong-hye’s metamorphosis in The Vegetarian represents a radical rejection of social standards.
In a world where the sun burns mercilessly and monsters lurk in disguise, trust becomes the most dangerous gamble in No, I’m not a Human.
Jimmy did not just turn into a monster—the system, built on brutality, instability, and desperation, made him one.
Heathcliff, a figure of both passion and vengeance, embodies the Gothic tensions of Wuthering Heights, blurring the lines between love and obsession.