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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel
Based on Diamond's, Guns, Germs and Steel, what does Diamond conclude about the way we as a species have evolved? Also, Why is the west so "dominant" i.e. why did we wipe out the Indians in America instead of their…
Research Paper Undergraduate
The American Revolution
In the mid- to the late eighteenth century, there was growing discontent among the thirteen colonies in the Americas. The seeds of protest were laid, as the colonies questioned the wisdom of remaining under British rule.
Paper Undergraduate
Candide One of the Most
One of the most interesting books produced by Voltaire is "Candide or Optimism," a satire attacking the "optimist" life paradigm promoted by some of the philosophers of the Enlightenment Age such as Leibniz.
Paper Doctorate
Organization\'s Web Site, a Checklist
¶ … organization's Web site, a checklist of criteria provided by Management Center International Limited (1) represents a useful tool. We have selected those items of the checklist that best apply to Web sites or blogs…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Philadelphia International Airport Expansion Plan
Over the last several years, a variety of U.S. airports have been experiencing tremendous amounts of congestion. Part of the reason for this, is because many locations are built in areas that have seen rapid increases…
Essay Doctorate
Benin Bronzes Are an Example of Culture
Benin Bronzes are an example of culture and representation encapsulated in art work. Although these artifacts in themselves contain so much controversy because of the way that they were originally attained, it brings…
Paper Undergraduate
Smith\'s General History Captain John
Captain John Smith's "Narratives of Early Virginia" in his General History are much more -- and in some ways much less -- than a simple history of Jamestown and the issues that the early European settlers faced.
Essay Doctorate
Indigenous Populations in Republican Rome (Ca. 500
Indigenous populations in Republican Rome (ca. 500 BCE – 31 BCE) There were number of indigenous populations that were conquered by the Roman Republic whilst on the expansionary course. The fundamental issues that these populations, isolated ethnic minorities faced were regarding the preservation of their culture, their economic life, and their right to the properties in which they lived since centuries. Equality is the paramount notion that comes to mind regarding ‘citizenship'. Race and gender have been predominant factors that have enabled the elites to exclude the indigenous people from their right to their properties and the lives they live.
Essay Doctorate
After the warming: James Burke documentary analysis and themes
The onset of the Industrial Revolution in the 1750s in England radically and permanently altered the relationship between people and the climate
Essay Doctorate
JetBlue Company Background Organizational Mission Vision Value
Review of strategies and a recommendation for the best strategy for the organization