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Bear
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The topic of "bear" appears most prominently in literary studies, where students engage with William Faulkner's short story and novella of the same name. Faulkner's work is taught widely in American literature courses because it raises layered questions about nature, human experience, and moral development. The recurring keyword "rite of passage" signals that this topic carries significant thematic weight in discussions of how individuals—particularly young people—navigate transitions in identity, society, and understanding. Beyond Faulkner, the broader subject intersects with environmental studies, cultural analysis, and even food systems writing, as seen in engagement with Michael Pollan's work on humanity's relationship with the natural world.

Student papers on this topic approach the material from several angles. Literary analysis dominates, with essays focusing on theme, symbolism, and character roles—particularly how figures within Faulkner's narrative reflect broader social and moral structures. Some papers take a thematic-comparative approach, examining how concepts like individual freedom, societal roles, and coming-of-age function across texts. Others shift toward cultural or ecological frameworks, using the bear as a lens for exploring humanity's relationship with nature, wilderness, and consumption.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad plot summary or vague observation about nature and humanity. Literary essays carry the most weight when grounded in close textual evidence, with attention to specific scenes, language, and narrative structure. A common pitfall is treating theme too abstractly—claiming a work is "about" growing up without demonstrating precisely how the text constructs that meaning through concrete detail and craft.

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Paper Undergraduate
Women in American history
In 1785, Martha Ballard began the diary that she would keep for the next 27 years, until her death. At a time when fewer than half the women in America were literate, Ballard faithfully recorded the weather, her daily…
Paper Undergraduate
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The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether the nature of a company's asset base (tangible or intangible) affects the capital structure policies of that company. This will be done using company data and…
Paper Undergraduate
Indigenous Rights in Canada: Pipeline, Hunting, and Treaty Disputes
¶ … edition of the Globe and Mail, Report on Business, titled Native Group Calls for Pipeline Boycott, regarding Canada's plan to find an "alternative" to export oil sands-crude to Asia for processing as an alternative…
Paper Doctorate
African Women Slavery What Was Life Like
What was life like for African female slaves?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Operation Just Cause and Operation
There are underlying similarities and differences between both the operations. A study in detail of operation Just Cause which was launched in December 1989 involved deployment of personnel form very distant military…
Paper Undergraduate
Fight Club and Casino Royale
This paper analyzes the role of masculinity in Fight Club and Casino Royale. Masculinity is defined as antagonistic to homosexuality, but both narratives create a masculine role model that is unique. Bond is clearly an Everyman fantasy, while Jack is looking to become masculine. However, if homosexuality is the negation of masculinity, then both stories are antagonistic.
Essay Doctorate
Amazon\'s Cloud Computing (Aws, EC2) Solutions; Paper
Amazon Web Services (AWS) has the strongest market share with 80 to 90 per cent of the cloud computing market. This paper presents an analysis of Amazon's cloud computing solutions within the industry which it operates and recommends strategies that will strengthen that firm's competitive position within an international context.
Research Paper High School
World War One: causes, course, and consequences
During the period between 1914 and 1918, the full brunt of early 20th century technology was brought to bear on the battlefields of Europe and the ghastly results were truly impressive, but the initial results of these weapons were insufficient to completely turn the tide of the war. Consequently, the belligerents became increasingly bogged down in trench warfare that demanded even more destructive weapons. To determine what happened during World War I in these areas, this paper details the type of techniques and weaponry used throughout the war and looks at how these changed technologically to change future wars. An examination concerning the reasons why there were so many stalemates on the battlefield, which led to a war of attrition and mass casualties is followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Urban marketing and event planning strategies
Dushane Urban Marketing Consultants is a start up company concentrating in making a connection between urban consumers and corporate America with live advertising, event production, cross promotions, and creative…
Research Paper Undergraduate
That evening sun go down in Faulkner's work
¶ … Faulkner, it is understood that the world his stories create is one that is rich with the kind of sparse detail that Hemingway loved, is filled with the dark view on humanity that so marked Flannery O'Connor, and is…