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Ambition
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Ambition is the drive to achieve goals, attain success, or rise beyond one's current circumstances, and it appears as a subject of study across a wide range of academic disciplines. Students in literature, psychology, business, and personal development courses all engage with it, whether analyzing how it shapes characters and narratives or examining how it functions in real human lives. It is academically interesting precisely because ambition sits at the intersection of individual psychology and social forces — touching on fear, fate, family expectations, and cultural definitions of what it means to be successful, particularly in contexts like America where upward mobility carries strong ideological weight.

The papers collected here approach ambition from several distinct angles. Literary analysis is common, with works like Julius Caesar serving as a lens for examining how unchecked ambition drives plot and theme. Personal and reflective writing also appears frequently, including personal statements that frame ambition in terms of individual identity, parental influence, and life goals. Other papers take a more applied or case-study approach, looking at ambition within business and organizational contexts, while some explore it through the lens of social constructs like gender inequality, asking whose ambition is rewarded and why.

A strong essay on ambition needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply calling ambition "good" or "bad" and instead argues something specific about how it operates under particular conditions. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, historical examples, or well-reasoned personal experience tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating ambition as a fixed trait rather than a dynamic force shaped by circumstance, culture, and consequence.

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Paper Doctorate
The creation of artificial life in Frankenstein and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep
The action takes place in a world covered with radioactive dust, after a nuclear war that has killed almost all animals, so that people have power animals. The protagonist is Rick Deckard, a former police officer and…
Paper Undergraduate
State powers versus federal powers in the United States
The Framing of the Inherently Federalist Constitution
Paper Doctorate
Folk Music the Evolution of Folk Music
The folk music genre has long been a mode for cultural expression, whether indigenous or driven by protest. However, as the commercial forms of folk have evolved, they have come to take on certain vocal and musical characteristics. These have in turn come to define the genre. This discussion offers a concise history of folk music with a focus on the revivals of the 1960s and the 2000s.
Essay Doctorate
Review of Good to Great: Jim Collins' four key concepts
Twelve page paper on the book Good to Great by Collins. .0 Level 5 Leadership Which is harder to cultivate within yourself: humility or will ? 2.0 Who First? If compensation is not the primary driver for the right people on the bus, then what are the primary elements in getting and keeping the right people on the bus? What role does compensation play? 3.0 Hedgehog Concept Which is more important for an organization, the goal to be the best at something, or realistic understanding of what you can (and cannot) be the best at?? 4.0 Technology Accelerators
Paper Undergraduate
Dr Veraswami and his significance in literature
Ambivalence of Dr. Veraswami of George Orwell's Burmese Days
Thesis Doctorate
Nathaniel Hawthorne: life and literary works
Were all the literary works of Nathaniel Hawthorne compiled into a single manuscript, then appropriately filtered to include only works of prose and fiction, and if an attempt were then made to uncover a single motif…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Throne of Death Akira Kurosawa\'s
Akira Kurosawa's Throne of Blood is more than just an adaptation of Shakespeare's Macbeth. The film is a visual feast with riddled rich symbolism. It is that symbolism that makes Throne of Blood so memorable.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Manhattan Transfer Is the Novel
Is the novel unified, or does it have too many characters and too many different stories? What unifying elements does the novel use? What is its aim?
Paper Undergraduate
Authoritarian Modernization the Reforms Undertaken
The reforms undertaken in Iran and Turkey by Reza Shah Pahlavi and Kemal Ataturk respectively, during the early half of the previous century, are two classical cases of authoritarian modernization in the study of…
Paper Doctorate
Management as a Profession: Definition, Education, and Standards
According to the Merriam Webster dictionary, a Profession is: a. a calling requiring specialized knowledge and often long and intensive academic preparation b. a principal calling, vocation, or employment and c. the whole body of persons engaged in a calling. Increasingly management as a class of employment has come to be seen as a profession which qualifies on all three levels of this definition. Though there are ways into this particular profession that do not necessarily require years of intensive academic education, varying by industry and often pay scale there is a clear sense that those who engage in management as a vocational calling often require both years of education and years of internal preparation to hold the position (Crainer, 2010, pp. 12-16). Increasingly, the prerequisite to a management position is sought through formal education and a combination of formal education and provable experience in or out of the industry where the former organisation managed is seen as successful and profitable. Crainer states: The last century witnessed the dramatic genesis of management – management emerged as a profession. It has moved from an unspoken, informal, ad hoc activity into one that is routinely analysed and commented on from every angle possible. Management has emerged from the shadows to be recognized as one of the driving forces of economic and personal life. Nothing – no organisation, no activity – now appears beyond the scope or ambition of management. (p. 13) By varying degree of field and organisation management has become a much more formal ideation and practice, with higher standards of professionalism and higher standards of action for those who participate.