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Review article

https://doi.org/10.29162/ANAFORA.v12i2.6

Navigating Academic Crises: Insights from Literary Narratives

Evelina Miščin orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-5571-2406 ; RIT Croatia, Zagreb, Croatia


Full text: english pdf 190 Kb

page 439-454

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Abstract

This paper explores how crises within the academic world are portrayed in three influential British and American novels: Kingsley Amis’s Lucky Jim, John Williams’s Stoner, and Donna Tartt’s The Secret History. It offers a comparative reading that situates these works within the tradition of the academic (or campus) novel and examines how they reveal shifting notions of personal, professional, and moral crisis in higher education. Drawing on literary theory and sociological understandings of “crisis,” the paper examines how these narratives articulate crises of identity, purpose, and ethics through their protagonists. Lucky Jim uses comic satire to expose the absurdity of mid-century British academic conformity, Stoner reframes academic life as a quiet tragedy of unrealized personal purpose, and The Secret History pushes the genre toward psychological and moral decay, depicting how intellectual elitism can lead to moral collapse. By comparing these novels, the paper argues that the campus novel genre has evolved from social satire to psychological thriller while keeping its critical lens on the conflicts between individual identity and institutional norms. These novels continue to function as powerful cultural critiques of university life.

Keywords

academic novels, identity crisis, institutional critique, satire

Hrčak ID:

342959

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/342959

Publication date:

30.12.2025.

Article data in other languages: german croatian

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