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American Literature
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American literature encompasses the written works produced within the United States and its preceding colonial context, reflecting the nation's evolving cultural, social, and political identity. It appears across undergraduate survey courses, composition classes, and specialized seminars in English and humanities programs. The field is academically rich because it traces how writers have responded to distinctly American experiences — frontier life, immigration, racial diversity, and democratic ideals — while also participating in broader Western literary traditions. Movements such as Transcendentalism and Naturalism, along with authors including Edgar Allan Poe, Ernest Hemingway, and T. S. Eliot, serve as recurring reference points that anchor discussions of how American writing has defined and redefined itself over time.

Student essays on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative analyses examine how American literature diverges from European traditions in style, theme, and cultural outlook, while historical surveys trace the development of major literary movements and the authors associated with them. Other papers focus closely on a single work, such as Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms, to analyze realistic elements or recurring themes like lust, desire, and death. Some essays address Transcendentalism as an ideological framework, and others explore multicultural dimensions of American writing, reflecting the country's diverse voices and perspectives.

A strong essay on American literature begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of the field. Evidence drawn from primary texts — specific passages, narrative choices, and authorial style — carries more weight than general historical summary. The most common pitfall is treating "American literature" as a single unified tradition; acknowledging its internal tensions and competing movements produces far more convincing and sophisticated analysis.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Trace the Development (or Lack) of One
Trace the development (or lack) of one of the major characters in the story, from beginning to end.
Thesis High School
Comparison and contrast analysis
One of modern society's seemingly paranoid neuroses is it's obsession with machines and their replacement of humanity. The ever-constant conflict between man's desire to produce things more efficiently, necessitating the replacement of human labor with machine labor, and the subsequent consumer-based society that has arisen because of it, has led to one of the most pressing social questions a society has ever faced. Is the modern world‘s rapid development of the planet leading to the destruction of civilization?
Paper Doctorate
Cora Unashamed This Short Story by Langston
This short story by Langston Hughes weaves a number of tragic and regrettable stories -- and themes -- within the tapestry of the central story line. But Hughes also gives the reader a reason to believe that an…
Paper High School
American literature: overview and major works
Despite their different backgrounds and experiences, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau shared a number of ideas. Compare their views on nature, the individual, and conformity.
Paper Doctorate
Women's roles in love and marriage: 1800s versus today
Women Today and Yesterday in "The Story of an Hour"
Research Paper Undergraduate
Holly Bilski English 130b Dr.
Prosodic Peek at Charles Martin's "Victoria's Secret"
Paper Undergraduate
Symbolism Explored in the Story
¶ … Symbolism Explored in "The Story of an Hour" and "Young Goodman Brown"
Paper Undergraduate
Women Authors and the Harlem
In the early 1900s, particularly in the 20s and early 30s, African-American literature, art, music, and dance began to flourish in Harlem, a section of New York City. Variously known as the New Negro movement, the New…
Paper Undergraduate
Social and cultural movements during the literary realism period
Realism began as a reaction to early 20th century Romanticism. Realism' origins are usually traced back to 19th century France, to the works of authors such as Stendhal, the author of the Red and the Black and Madame…
Paper Undergraduate
Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald
F. Scott Fitzgerald was born in Minnesota in 1896, a descendent of the author of "The Star Spangled Banner," hence the name "Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald." Fitzgerald attended Princeton University and began his writing…