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American History
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American History is one of the most widely studied subjects across academic disciplines, appearing in courses ranging from survey-level undergraduate history classes to advanced seminars in political science, sociology, and cultural studies. The field examines how the United States developed as a nation — its conflicts, institutions, social movements, and transformations over time. What makes it academically compelling is the tension between competing narratives about power, identity, and belonging, as events like the Civil War, Japanese American internment during World War II, and landmark legal decisions such as Roe v. Wade reveal deep contradictions within American society. Figures like John Brown and frameworks like Frederick Jackson Turner's Frontier Thesis further illustrate how individuals and ideas have shaped national identity in contested ways.

Student papers on this topic take a wide variety of approaches. Some focus on specific turning points or conflicts, such as the causes of the Civil War or the political consequences of the French and Indian War. Others adopt case-study formats, examining events like the Tulsa Lynching of 1921 or Japanese American internment through ethnographic or social lenses. Critical and comparative analyses also appear frequently, including film critiques, book reviews, and essays applying sociological theories to historical patterns of discrimination and federal power expansion.

A strong essay in this area begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim about an entire era. Evidence drawn from primary sources, court records, or well-documented historical events carries the most weight. The most common pitfall to avoid is treating American history as a single unified story — the strongest essays acknowledge complexity, contradiction, and the experiences of groups whose perspectives have often been marginalized.

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Paper Undergraduate
America Grade Level: Social Studies This Activity
Overview & Purpose This activity is intended to focus on developing critical thinking, research, reading and writing skills in Students by making students motivated about learning necessary facts about United States, its demographics, history and distinctive attributes of U.S. Education Standards Addressed This particular lesson plan adheres to the Education Standard of United States (Teaching standards of the respective states)
Paper Undergraduate
Thoughts on Book Readings
This three page paper explores readings that challenge the American worldview and portrayl of itself in historical accounts. How the US views itself is often at odds with how the rest of the world does. Why? Our shared history and collective narratives about who we have been is based on our cultural values and beliefs about who we are. This is very clear in our school texts which are markedly different from the retellings of the same major events in foreign texts. This paper examines this in closer detail.
Paper Undergraduate
Glory: historical and cultural significance
The movie "Glory" is my favorite war film for many reasons. In this paper I will point out the qualities in this film, what it portrays, its accuracy and its political and social message.
Research Paper Doctorate
Public Policy on People With AIDS
Public AIDS Policy -- And the Band Played on, for Republicans and Democrats alike, during this public health crisis of the 1980's
Paper High School
Lust by Susan Minot
Many authors have tried to capture, in print, the complex dynamics between men and women, male and female. This can be a very difficult process as it can be impossible to put into words exactly what happens when two…
Paper Doctorate
Rape Culture and Fraternity Risk Levels on College Campuses
The subject of this paper will be upon one of the more pejorative and horrific traditions of rape and the sustainment of rape culture on undergraduate campuses, with specific focus of rape culture in the Greek (fraternity) systems. Joining a fraternity, known by a shorter moniker among young people, "frats," is a high point of many young men. Fraternities throw parties, participate in community service, and are one of the most likely places for an undergraduate woman to be raped and otherwise humiliated, assaulted, or disrespected. The paper will explore the differences among high risk and low risk fraternities as a means of analysis and ultimately conclusion as to what precise factors contribute to women's safety and overall fun at frat parties.
Research Paper Doctorate
Prior Learning US Historic Travel
Your Highnesses have an Other World here, by which our holy faith can be so greatly advanced and from which such great wealth can be drawn," wrote Christopher Columbus to the king and queen of Spain following his third…
Research Paper Doctorate
The American National Character: Identity, Values, and Culture
America can almost be thought of as a massive experiment in culture. Here we have a nation inhabited almost entirely by immigrants; all with different languages, customs, beliefs, and appearances who are forced to…
Paper High School
A nation among nations book review
Thomas Bender is qualified in telling the story of America as he sees it given that he is a professor of history, the University Professor of Humanities, and director of the International Center for Advanced Studies at New York University. He is also the author and editor of many books, has been awarded prizes and scholarships, and is a renowned historian of American culture. In this way, well acquainted with the history of America, he is able to critically asses the fashion of its narration as well as recommend the way that it should be told, and its narration, he informs, us does not cohere to the way that American history actually occurred in reality.
Paper Doctorate
Representations of Female Sexuality in the 1950\'s
This paper looks at how certain icons of the 1950s changed perceptions of female sexuality following the second world war. Barbie was first introduced in 1959, beauty pageants were broadcast to every hiome in the United States and Marilyn Monroe was parading across the big screen and changing everyone's view of beauty and sexuality.