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A Literary History of Valentine’s Day

  The Rose and the Quill: A Literary History of Valentine’s Day 🌹✨ On the fourteenth day of February, when winter still lingers like a pale memory upon the earth and spring hesitates at the threshold, the world pauses to whisper a single word—love. Valentine’s Day, now embroidered with roses, letters, chocolates, and shy confessions, appears at first glance to be a modern festival of sentiment. Yet beneath its crimson ribbons lies a layered history—woven with martyrdom, myth, medieval poetry, and the slow flowering of romantic imagination. To trace the history of Valentine’s Day is to wander through the corridors of faith and folklore, to sit beside poets who first gave the day its lyrical breath, and to understand how literature transformed a saint’s feast into a celebration of earthly affection. I. The Shadowed Saint: The Martyr Behind the Name The origin of Valentine’s Day is rooted in the lives of early Christian martyrs named Valentine. Among them, the most remembered is ...

Auteur Studies and Literature

Auteur Studies and Literature: Concept, Development, and Emerging Research Directions Introduction Auteur studies is a critical approach that focuses on the individual creator as the central shaping force behind a text or a film. The term auteur comes from the French word meaning author . While auteur theory originated in film studies , its ideas have increasingly influenced literary studies , cultural studies, media studies, and interdisciplinary research. In literature, auteur studies examine how a writer’s personal vision, recurring themes, stylistic patterns, ideology, and lived experience shape their creative works across time. In recent years, auteur studies has re-emerged as an important research area , especially due to the rise of identity-based criticism, postcolonial studies, gender studies, eco-criticism, and digital humanities . Scholars now revisit the idea of the “author” not as a single controlling genius, but as a situated, h...

Chapter-Wise Summary and Analysis of Premchand’s Godan | The Gift of a Cow| Chapters 24-36

📜Chapter Twenty-Four Summary: The Price of Daughters In Chapter Twenty-Four, the narrative focus shifts to the domestic crisis of marriage. With Sona reaching marriageable age, Hori and Dhaniya face a new, crushing reality. In the rigid social structure of the village, marrying off a daughter requires a dowry and a feast—neither of which Hori can afford. This chapter highlights the commodification of women in a debt-ridden society, where a daughter’s wedding is not a celebration but a financial catastrophe for the poor. The chapter is marked by a bitter irony: while the elite in Lucknow (Malti and Mehta) debate the theoretical rights of women, Hori is forced to negotiate his daughter's life based on a few rupees. We see the return of the greedy Pandit Datadin and other village exploiters who, instead of helping, look for ways to profit from Hori's desperation. Hori’s health continues to fail as he takes on extra work as a laborer on other pe...

Chapter-Wise Summary and Analysis of Premchand’s Godan | The Gift of a Cow| Chapters 11-23

Godan: The Gift of a Cow Chapter-Wise Summary & Analysis (11–23) Series Update: Welcome back to our comprehensive study of Premchand's Godan . Previously, we published an in-depth exploration of the core themes and characters , followed by a detailed summary of Chapters 1–10 . In this post, we shift our focus to Chapters 11–23 , exploring the widening rift between the rural debt crisis and the changing landscape of urban India. Chapter 11: The Flight to the City : Gobar, representing the disillusioned youth, leaves the village for Lucknow. This marks a shift from agrarian struggle to industrial reality... "In the village, a man is judged by his ancestors; in the city, he is judged by the work of his own hands." Chapter 23: The Transformation of Malti : The urban circle visits a village fair, where Miss Malti experiences a moral awakening through an act of...