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Book
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What is Book?

Books as a subject of academic study appear across nearly every discipline, from literature and history to sociology, law, nursing, and business. Students are asked to engage with books not just as vessels of information but as objects of analysis — examining how an author constructs an argument, develops characters, or frames a social issue. The diversity of texts students encounter, ranging from scriptural passages like the Book of Job to sociological works, activist histories such as The Struggle for Black Equality, and narrative nonfiction like Jonathan Harr's A Civil Action, reflects how broadly the act of reading functions as an academic skill and a critical practice.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are chapter-level summaries designed to distill core arguments, while others are full critical analyses that evaluate an author's rhetorical choices, cultural assumptions, or thematic concerns. Comparative readings appear alongside case-based approaches, where a text is placed in dialogue with real-world contexts such as environmental law or leadership practice. Works like Buchi Emecheta's The Joys of Motherhood and Muddy Boots Leadership show how literary and practical texts alike receive close analytical treatment.

A strong essay focused on a book establishes a clear, arguable thesis rather than simply restating what an author says. Evidence should come from specific passages, chapters, or structural choices within the text itself. The most common pitfall is treating summary as analysis — explaining what a book contains without explaining why those choices matter or what they reveal about a larger idea, context, or problem.

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Paper Doctorate
Ethical Dilemma: Confronting Unjust Authority
The paper creates an understanding of an ethical dilemma by identifying an ethical dilemma in Pollack's book. It takes into consideration the moral, legal plus professional outcomes of taking an ethical action. The paper discusses the issues of unjust authority as well as the abuse of power. It explains whether the author provides a code of conduct useful for resolving the dilemma.
Paper High School
Sara Miles and the practice of taking communion bread
One day when Sara Miles was 46 years old she did something she had never done before, the celebrated the sacrament of Holy Eucharist for the first time. She described this monumental event as "outrageous and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Social and political effects of birth control in England
In England, there have been changes in the laws that govern birth control, just as there have been in many countries. In the early part of the 20th century family planning on a more deliberate level began to appear in…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Arson Over Thirty Thousand Structural
Over thirty thousand structural fires are set annually at a cost of over three-quarters of a million dollars worth of damage and more than three hundred lives lost. Additionally over twenty thousand intentionally set…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Influence of the Bible on Christian mission
In the early 1960s, there was concern about the direction of the Christian mission in the world (Anderson, Gerald, 1961, p. 3). The reason for this concern arose largely out of events that were taking place in many of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Jungian Phenomenology and Police Training
The methodologies selected for this study were the meta-synthesis approach developed by Noblit and Hare (1988) and a content analysis technique described by Neuman (2003) and others.
Paper Undergraduate
Americanization of Europe After 1945
The author of the book is Victoria de Grazia. She is currently a professor at Columbia University, teaching history, which is the same area in which she obtained a Phd. The other books which she has written demonstrate…
Paper Undergraduate
Learning Theories Abstract, Learned Phenomena
Transfer of Knowledge, Skills, Strategies
Essay Doctorate
Negotiation of position and resistance within total institutions
The presence of total institutions within our overall societal structure provides a unique opportunity for anthropologic inquiry through the standardization of individual behaviors.
Essay Doctorate
Historical developments expanding women's opportunities from 1865 to present
The sphere of women's work had been strictly confined to the domestic realm, prior to the Industrial Revolution. Social isolation, financial dependence, and political disenfranchisement characterized the female experience prior to the twentieth century. The suffrage movement was certainly the first sign of the dismantling of the institutionalization of patriarchy, followed by universal access to education, and finally, the civil rights movement. Opportunities for women have gradually unfolded since the suffrage movement. Although patriarchal social norms still hold sway in some situations, the isolation of women has long been outmoded in the West.