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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 Undergraduate
Books of the Bible
The Book of Job is written as a narrative account of the sufferings of Job and his coming to terms with the fact that God allows good people to suffer for a reason -- even if that reason is not immediately clear.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The Bluest Eye
Toni Morrison, the 1993 Nobel Laureate, has always been a champion of African-American rights and like some other famous black writers in the field of literature; she too based her writings on personal experiences and…
Paper Undergraduate
Sophisticated Argument About a Particular
An 'American' Media Artifact: American Girl and "Kit Kittredge, American Girl"
Paper Undergraduate
Spirit Catches You the Makeup
The makeup of the world is undergoing a major change in demographics. In the next twenty to thirty years, the American population will be significantly different, with the number Hispanics and Asians growing at a much…
Paper Undergraduate
Spencer, Herbert. 1860. The Social
Spencer, Herbert. 1860. The Social Organization. The Westminster Review. In Anthropological Theory: An Introductory Theory. Fourth Edition. R. McGee and Richard Warms. McGraw Hill.
Paper Undergraduate
Descartes \"Meditations...\" Meditations on First
Meditations on First Philosophy - a Summary
Paper Undergraduate
An exercise in anachronism
Universal Peace and the Primacy of Reason: the Formula for Happiness
Paper Undergraduate
Structure and function in Harry Potter
¶ … Ritual Magic of Rites of Passage in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Paper Undergraduate
Documented analysis of The Scarlet Letter
Secrets as the Primary Destructive Force in the Scarlet Letter
Paper Masters
Dan Brown and the Fibonacci
In the novel the Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown uses the Fibonacci sequence (in a scrambled version) as one of the clues left for the cryptographer (Rogak, 2005). It is something in the book that many people would probably…