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Characterization
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Characterization is the craft by which writers construct fictional and narrative personas, revealing personality, motivation, and moral complexity through action, dialogue, and description. It sits at the center of literary studies courses, from introductory composition to upper-level seminars, because understanding how characters are built is fundamental to interpreting any text. Works such as Flannery O'Connor's "Revelation" and "A Good Man Is Hard to Find," Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol, Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, and Jean-Paul Sartre's No Exit appear frequently in academic writing precisely because their characters embody larger questions about identity, morality, family, and the human condition.

Student papers on this topic approach characterization from several angles. Literary analysis papers examine how specific characters evolve across a narrative arc, tracing the relationship between a character's inner life and external conflict. Comparative essays set characters from different works against one another to highlight contrasting techniques or thematic concerns. Some papers ground their analysis in a single story or play, offering close readings of pivotal scenes, while others engage memoirs and personal essays — such as Bernard Cooper's "A Clack of Tiny Sparks" — where the line between character and real-life subject becomes a point of critical inquiry.

A strong essay on characterization begins with a focused thesis that connects a specific technique — such as indirect characterization through dialogue or the use of foils — to a broader interpretive claim about the work's meaning. Textual evidence drawn directly from the narrative carries the most weight, particularly passages that reveal character through action or relationship rather than simple description. The most common pitfall is summarizing what a character does rather than analyzing how and why the author constructs them that way.

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Paper Undergraduate
Herman Melville, Bartelby the Scrivener:
The short story by Herman Melville, "Bartelby the scrivener: a story of Wall Street" is at this point considered one of the most important short stories of American literature. Although it was not received with best reviews in the 1850s when it was first published, the complexity of the writing as well as the themes of the story recommended the piece of literature as one of the most interesting and at the same time revealing literary creations of its time. The main character, Bartelby is the main focus of the story and the element that provides complexity to the piece.
Research Paper Doctorate
Social construction of reality
Social Construction Theory of Reality by Peter Berger and Thomas Luckman Applied to the novel "Tom Sawyer" by Mark Twain
Paper Masters
Husserl Language and Consciousness
Husserl, Language & Consciousness: Reconciliation of Edmund Husserl's Fourth Logical Investigation and Fifth logical investigation
Essay Doctorate
File upload and reading question processes
Thematic issues in Chopin's "The Story of an Hour,": plot, setting, voice, characterization, symbols, foreshadowing, and/or irony.
Paper Doctorate
Calvin, John. Calvin\'s \"Institutes\": A New Compend.
This paper is a book review of Calvin, John. Calvin's "Institutes": A New Compend. Introduction by Hugh Ker (John Knox Press, 1989). It is composed partially of analysis and partially of summary of the materials. The paper suggests that Calvin's writings offer many insights into today's theological debates, even though he is no longer a fashionable theologian.
Paper Undergraduate
Final paper topics and research directions
This is a comparative analysis O'Connor's A Good Man is hard to find and, Faulkner's A Rose for Emily. The paper maintains a balanced discussion of two texts and really making connections between the two texts. The paper focuses on the relevance of the texts to the rise of the struggle against discrimination in the southern states.
Research Paper Doctorate
Little Women and Popular Culture
Little Women, Louisa May Alcott's defining work, which brought her much fame in her time, is a biographical account of her family. In the book, her father Amos Bronson is Mr. March and her mother Abigail May is Marmee,…
Paper Doctorate
Planning: Canadian RN Shortage Applied
Historically, medical worker shortages have been calculated using provider to patient ratios or estimates of demand, but both methods have significant problems because neither directly addresses patient need. Murphy and colleagues (2012) developed and tested a needs-based model to predict nursing shortages in Canada for the next 10 years; however, the real value of this model is its ability to test interventions for the desired outcomes by health policy makers. Based this model, simply increasing the nursing education enrollment will not address the nursing shortage, a finding that undermines the validity of the most common nursing-shortage policy intervention in use today. In addition, the model revealed that a combination of other interventions could easily alleviate the current and future nursing shortage.
Paper Undergraduate
Musical Theater West Side Story
West Side Story, filmed in 1961, was one of the most ground-breaking works not only in terms of subject and genre, but also in terms of the boundaries it broke with its musical scores and choreography.
Paper Undergraduate
Unit 3 topic overview and key concepts
This paper is a discussion of Willa Cather's Paul's Case. It examines the meanings of "theater" and "Romance" in Cather's characterization of Paul. Explaining the why Cather capitalize the word Romance. The paper explains the relationship between theater and Romance for Paul as well as investigating the effect of Cather's emphasis "Perhaps it was because, in Paul's world, the natural nearly always wore the guise of ugliness, that a certain element of artificiality, seemed to him necessary in beauty"