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Character
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Character, as a subject of literary study, sits at the intersection of psychology, ethics, and narrative craft. It asks how fictional and real individuals are constructed, what motivates their decisions, and how their inner lives shape the worlds around them. Courses in literature, film studies, ethics, and early education all engage with character analysis, since understanding how personalities form and function is central to interpreting any text or situation. Works like Winesburg, Ohio, "The Story of an Hour," "Two Kinds" by Amy Tan, and the film A Walk to Remember all offer rich material for examining how identity, morality, and circumstance interact to define a person.

Student papers on this topic tend to take several distinct approaches. Some perform close literary analysis, examining specific figures such as Mrs. Mallard or Landon Carter to trace how actions, dialogue, and setting reveal inner complexity. Others apply psychological frameworks, including psychoanalytic and object relations models, to understand motivation and behavior. Still others move into social and cultural territory, exploring how race and identity are constructed, as in Caucasia by Danzy Senna. Ethical frameworks also appear frequently, with essays connecting personal values to character development in professional or educational contexts.

A strong essay on character grounds its thesis in specific textual or contextual evidence rather than broad generalization. The most persuasive analyses link observable behavior, dialogue, or imagery to deeper claims about what a character represents thematically or psychologically. A common pitfall is describing a character's traits without arguing why those traits matter to the work's larger meaning, so the thesis should always push beyond summary toward interpretation.

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Paper Undergraduate
Fiction by Welty, Cheever, Ellison,
American fiction can be realistic or surrealistic, understated or grotesque. The authors Eudora Welty, John Cheever, James Baldwin, and Bernard Malamud tend to be classified in the realistic school of American narrative…
Paper Undergraduate
The Hamlet ghost and supernatural elements in Shakespeare
Besides the ghost of Hamlet's father, few characters in Shakespeare have such a great impact on the plot and so few lines spoken. Since Hamlet is so problematic in structure, and the ghost is so sparse in words, one…
Paper Masters
Compare and Contrast Native Americans and the Blues from Sherman Alexie Book Reservation Blues
This essay explores the relationship between Native American identity and the blues in Sherman Alexie's novel Reservation Blues. The blues provide a shared language for the expression of Native and African American experiences, and the novel explores how this shared language can lead to a confrontation with the past. By charting how the blues influence the characters and spaces of the novel, one is able to see how the relationships between Native, African, and white Americans are more complex and cross-cultural than one might previously expect.
Essay Doctorate
Harvey Milk: An Inspiring Story Leadership Harvey
Few men and women are remembered by history. In order to attain this highest of honors, an individual must be truly special, truly unique. Among those illustrious figures we now remember as persons who shaped this…
Research Paper Doctorate
Response of housekeeping to organizational change
The novel "Housekeeping" by Marilynne Robinson starts with "My name is Ruth." And concludes with Ruth's comment that she had "never distinguished readily between thinking and dreaming" and with the realization that her…
Paper Doctorate
Homer's Odyssey in Stanley Lombardo's translation with textual examples
Much of Homer's epic poem The Odyssey deals with the trouble the titular character finds himself in, and the suffering he and men must endure as he makes his way home over the course of ten years.
Paper Undergraduate
Habiby's novel as Israeli or Palestinian fiction: does genre matter
This paper discusses Emile Habiby's novel "The Secret Life of Saeed the Pessoptimist" and its appartenence to the Palestinian literature genre through relating to elements that are Arabic in character and concepts that have been borrowed from Western literature. Irony is one of Habiby's principal tools in having people confused concerning the purpose of the book and his thinking.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Baseball is America's Favorite Pastime
America's Pastime: The Importance of Baseball to United States Life and Culture: in Film, Society, and in Everyday Life That now timeworn clich?, 'baseball is as American as apple pie' may in fact nowadays ring (and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hanna-Barbera animators: careers, cartoons, and production techniques
Brief history of both Hanna & Barbera and how each evolved as animators:
Paper Undergraduate
William Faulkner's literary works and themes
Stream of Consciousness, Flashbacks, and Reminiscence as Emphasis of William Faulkner's Theme of the Presence of the Past in Three Works of Fiction