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Actor
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The concept of the actor sits at the intersection of performance studies, film studies, theater arts, and even psychology and law. Students across disciplines engage with this topic because it raises substantive questions about craft, identity, cultural production, and institutional power. Whether examining stage performance, Hollywood celebrity, or the psychological phenomenon known as the actor-observer effect, the subject invites analysis that goes well beyond simple biography or fan commentary. Works like Uta Hagen's writings on acting technique and Shakespeare's plays provide concrete frameworks for understanding how performers construct and communicate character for an audience.

The papers archived on this topic take a notably wide range of approaches. Some focus on performance craft, analyzing what it means for an actor to function as a scenographic instrument or working through Uta Hagen's challenges to the actor. Others shift toward cultural and institutional analysis, treating figures like Clint Eastwood as examples of cultural production or examining prestige events like the Academy Awards and the Oscars as systems for valuing performance. Still others apply psychological or legal lenses, exploring the actor-observer effect or concepts like discretionary power in relation to role and agency. Literary character analysis, as seen in papers on Mrs. Doubtfire, The Tempest, and The Shakespeare Stealer, rounds out the mix.

A strong essay on this topic needs a clearly bounded thesis — choosing one angle, whether craft, culture, psychology, or textual analysis, prevents the work from spreading too thin. Evidence drawn from specific performances, theoretical frameworks, or verifiable institutional contexts carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "actor" as purely a biographical subject rather than engaging with the roles, systems, or theories that give the concept genuine academic substance.

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Paper Doctorate
Dispositional Attributions in Western vs. Eastern Cultures
The following study looked at differences between 16 Western Americans and 16 Eastern Americans on their tendency to make internal attributions to explain the behavior of characters they read about. The participants were also administered measures of individualism and cultural identity. Western participants made more dispositional explanations than did their Eastern counterparts, but did not display higher individualism. The findings are discussed in the context of previous research. ?
Paper Doctorate
Institutions and International Relations Question
In her essay on the barriers to cooperation that limit effective communication between state actors within the international arena, Jennifer Sterling-Folker posits that three primary types of barriers to cooperation exist in the realm of international relations: Domestic, Structural, and Cognitive. According to Sterling-Folker, the domestic political climate within a pair of seemingly willing allies may preclude them from engaging in productive diplomatic negotiations, such as when impending national elections cause national policymaking to refocus on internal affairs. Structural barriers include the lack of common ground between communist and capitalist economies, and the gulf in understanding which separates dictatorships and democracies. Cognitive barriers are those which arise from ideological motivations, such as theocracies refusing to communicate with competing religions, or secular states scoffing at the religious norms of their neighbors. The liberal concept of interdependence, or providing a clear incentive to cooperate through the construction of complex institutions, is also discussed by Sterling-Folker, who observes that barriers to communication within world politics is due to the fact that nations invariably develop as autonomous entities with unique political, social, and economic structures.
Paper Doctorate
Annotation: principles and applications
A movie-centric periodical from the Silent Film Era tells the reader about more than just the films at the time. It informs the reader about stylistic and decorative choices, values and fascinations and modes of entertainment related to films. It showcases a snapshot of life and society of the period.
Paper Doctorate
Incongruous to Try to Compare the Artists
¶ … incongruous to try to compare the artists William Shakespeare and Bob Marley. These two men, separated by centuries and embodying two very different forms of art, both make up part of the history of popular culture.
Paper Doctorate
Blazing Saddles and the Toy
One of the most intriguing things about humans is that they have the ability to laugh in the face of danger. Even when they are in critical situations, people know that using humor is likely to make things easier for them and that optimism is one of the best methods to avoid feeling lost. Mel Brooks' motion picture Blazing Saddles and Richard Donner's film The Toy both present desperate individuals as they manage to find impressive solutions to seemingly impossible situations. The central characters in the two movies are individuals whom society tends to discriminate and who are unlikely to have success when considering their general condition.
Paper Doctorate
The O.J. Simpson case
Orenthal James Simpson, more commonly known as OJ Simpson, became the most popular man in the United States. This popularity was not due to him being a famous football player who had the greatest running backs in America or any of his roles as an actor, but because he was the defendant in the most publicized and popular murder case in American history. It was the ‘Trial of the Century'. OJ was accused of the murder of his ex-wife Nichole Brown Simpson and another Ronald Goldman, who was merely there to deliver a pair of glasses, outside Nichole's residence.
Paper Doctorate
Social construction of technology
The paper is a critique of the SCOT theory, which is the theory of the social construction of technology. The SCOT theory has been present for nearly four decades and continues to grow in importance and relevance to modern times. The paper analyzes SCOT as well as its opposing viewpoint, technological determinism. The paper ultimately argues in favor for SCOT providing examples and theoretical support.
Paper Undergraduate
Attribution theory: concepts, research, and applications
People behave differently depending on situations that surround them. This phenomenon is understood better with the help of the attribution theory. This study advances the concept of attribution theory as presented various authors who have undertaken studies relating to this theory. It is evident that this theory is fundamental in understanding the way people behave and guides us on how we respond.
Thesis Masters
Shakespeare's The Tempest: themes and analysis
In the epilogue of A Midsummer's Night Dream, Puck speaks to the audience directly not as an actor or a character in a play, while in The Tempest, Prospero is still in character but begs the audience to set him free so…
Essay Doctorate
Theatre: English-Speaking Versions of Hamlet vs. European
This paper illuminates two different interpretive approaches in 20th century theater by comparing two different ways of staging Shakespeare's Hamlet. It contrasts the more politicized Continental European view of Hamlet as a dissident with the English-speaking theater's view of Hamlet as man with a tortured individual psyche who tragically could not make up his mind.