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Allegory
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Allegory is a literary and philosophical device in which characters, settings, and events carry sustained symbolic meaning beyond their surface narrative. Students encounter it across literature, philosophy, and humanities courses because it sits at the intersection of storytelling and argument, making abstract ideas accessible through concrete imagery. The most prominent work in these papers is Plato's Allegory of the Cave, drawn from The Republic, in which prisoners chained before a wall interpret shadows as reality until one escapes into the light. This scenario has remained a cornerstone of academic inquiry because it dramatizes fundamental questions about knowledge, truth, perception, and the examined life.

Student papers on this topic take several consistent approaches. Philosophical summary and close reading are common, with many essays unpacking Plato's cave, its prisoners, shadows, and the ascent toward light as stages in understanding reality. Comparative analysis also appears frequently, most notably in papers pairing Plato's allegory with the film The Matrix to explore how the same ideas translate across centuries and media. Some papers place the allegory in dialogue with other thinkers such as Descartes, while others extend into Christian allegory, examining texts like The Pilgrim's Progress and the treatment of characters like Faithful at Vanity Fair.

A strong essay on allegory requires a focused thesis about what the symbolic layer reveals that a literal reading cannot. Evidence should trace specific images — light, shadows, the cave wall, the journey upward — back to the abstract concepts they represent. The most common pitfall is summarizing the narrative without analyzing the symbolic structure, which reduces an interpretive essay to mere plot description and leaves the deeper argument undeveloped.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Moved the Cheese Who Moved
Who Moved My Cheese by Spenser Johnson is an allegory of the mice, Sniff and Scurry, and little people, Hem and Haw, who live in a maze and are looking for the cheese that has moved.
Paper Undergraduate
Psychological consequences of colonialism
Colonialism is one of the most traumatic events that can befall humanity. It takes a once peaceful existence and plunges it into chaos. Like a robber that breaks into a house, colonialism steals away the victim's sense…
Research Paper Doctorate
Plato the Republic and Huxley\'s Brave New World
IN WHAT WAYS DOES THE SOCIETY IN BRAVE NEW WORLD MOST CLOSELY PARALLEL THE IDEAL CITY DESCRIBED BY PLATO IN THE REPUBLIC?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Adam the Story of Adam
THE STORY of ADAM as PRESENTED in the HOLY BIBLE
Essay Doctorate
Bereford\'s Double Jeopardy Double Jeopardy an Analysis
A critical analysis of Bruce Bereford's Double Jeopardy, starring Ashley Judd and Tommy Lee Jones. In the paper, storytelling, visual style, acting, editing, sound, social impact, and genre, among other elements are analyzed. It is concluded that the superficiality of the narrative, in addition to depending on the actors' star power, fails to make the film substantial and does not allow Beresford to make a statement as a director.
Research Paper Doctorate
Poetry and the Unknown Citizen
Introduction to Poetry: The late Stanley Kunitz received just about every prestigious award and appointment that a poet could achieve. He was named "United States Poet Laureate" in 200; he was designated "State Poet of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
The merchant of Venice
¶ … Merchant of Venice is a framework for expressing Shakespeare's anti-slavery sentiments in a most vivid and gruesome way. It has been argued that it is too obvious, for Shakespeare to be expressing these sentiments,…
Paper Undergraduate
Jany Eyre
Jane Eyre as a Study of Victorian England
Research Paper Doctorate
King Pest, One of Edgar
King Pest, one of Edgar Allen Poe's least popular short stories, is set in the fourteenth century during the reign of King Edward III in England. With the Bubonic plague as a backdrop, and with a progressively more…
Paper Doctorate
World literature survey and major works
Monetary gain is viewed differently across cultures and across social classes. In particular, British literature refers to the industrialization of their nation as being something that drove simple people to be financially motivated. They saw money as having a negative affect on how people conducted their lives. Russian, French, and Indian literature also share this view on money. They all believe that greed will eventually lead to the downfall of humanity.