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Americas
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The Americas as an academic topic spans history, cultural studies, anthropology, and humanities courses, inviting students to examine the Western Hemisphere across vast stretches of time and across deeply varied societies. What makes the subject academically compelling is its scale and complexity: from pre-Columbian civilizations explored in works like 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus to the colonial transformations analyzed through Latin colonial history, the region forces students to grapple with questions of land, power, culture, and identity. The recurring presence of Europe, Africa, and forced migration in the scholarship signals that the Americas cannot be understood in isolation but must be studied as a product of violent global entanglements, including slavery and conquest.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are historically grounded, tracing colonial legacies or examining specific events such as the smallpox plague of 1779. Others are comparative, setting migration patterns or cultural developments side by side across different populations. Literary and humanistic angles also appear, including engagements with abolitionist literature and Chicano and Chicana studies frameworks. Cartographic and geographical perspectives surface as well, reflecting interest in how maps shaped and communicated ideas about the hemisphere. Works like Chasteen's Born of Blood and Fire and Salisbury's Manitou and Providence ground several papers in specific scholarly conversations.

A strong essay on the Americas requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey. Evidence drawn from primary sources, specific historical events, or named scholarly texts carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "the Americas" as a single, uniform place — successful essays specify a region, period, or community and build their argument outward from that defined scope.

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Thesis Undergraduate
Bartolom De Las Casas Human Rights Activist
This paper examines the life and work of Bartoleme de Las Casas, whom may be considered as an early human rights activist within the Church during the days of Spanish colonization of the New World. His writings are noted for their passionate defense of the Indian--but also for their exaggerated notion of Spanish violence.
Research Paper Undergraduate
California History- Indians the History
The history of Californian Indians is not much different from the history of Indians in other parts of America. Unfortunately the Native Americans had a primitive life style and were no match for the European who…
Term Paper Undergraduate
Ceremonies of Possession in Europe\'s Conquest of the New World 1492-1640
The book "Ceremonies of Possession" offers a unique method of examining the process of colonization in the New World. The author suggests that the method utilized by the five primary nations involved in the process of settling the New World influenced how the settlements developed and how the cultures in each settlement were affected.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Age of Discovery: The So-Called
The so-called "Age of Discovery" occurred between 1450 and 1650, roughly beginning during the early years of the Renaissance Period in Europe and ending with the "Age of Reason." During this two hundred year span,…
Research Paper Doctorate
United State\'s Westward Expansion From 1800 to 1850
The United States Expansion in 19th century
Research Paper Undergraduate
Soon After 911 Terrorist Attack,
Soon after 911 terrorist attack, the federal government introduced a regulation as per which 'export controls and trade sanctions and embargoes were regarded as the tools to guard against terrorism, and is devoting…
Paper Undergraduate
International economy: concepts, trends, and global trade
Does immigration and migration from a country really affect the economy of the country? Britain is not new to both. For over two centuries Britain was the centre of an empire where the sun never set.
Essay Doctorate
Artistic expression and liberation in enslaved communities
From slavery times, far more records about black spirituals have survived than for secular music, and the most common religious themes always involved freedom, an escape from bondage and Moses leading the children of Israel out of Egypt. Black slaves may have had the evangelical Protestant religion of their masters imposed on them for purposes on control, but they also appropriated it and made this religion their own—and the black church was one of the very few institutions that they did control before recent times. In essence, black theology was always a version of liberation theology, compared to emphasis that white evangelicals placed on individual sin and personal salvation, and this is reflected in black religious music. Africans brought the banjo with them to America, along with other percussion and string instruments, and also quickly learned to play European guitars and violins, while the banjo became very common among lower-class whites.
Paper Undergraduate
Aboriginal art: history, significance, and contemporary practice
Canada has a very rich and unique history in the modern era, having maintained connections to its parent country while achieving independence in a peaceful manner. At first, Canada was also unique in the relationships…
Paper Undergraduate
Bolivia the History of Bolivia
The history of Bolivia is characterized by instability and political turmoil. Modern-day Bolivia gained independence in 1820. However, because the country was carved from three distinct regions, each with its own…