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Civil War
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The Civil War stands as one of the most studied events in American history, examined across courses in U.S. history, political history, military history, and social history. It represents a fundamental crisis over slavery, union, and national identity that reshaped the country permanently. The conflict draws sustained academic attention because it sits at the intersection of political ideology, racial history, military strategy, and social transformation, making it relevant to a wide range of analytical frameworks. Works such as James M. McPherson's For Cause and Comrades and broader studies on the coming of the Civil War give students rich primary and secondary source material to engage with.

Student papers on this topic approach it from several distinct angles. Causal analysis is especially common, with essays examining the economic, political, and moral tensions between North and South that made conflict inevitable. Other papers take a biographical or military focus, such as analyses of Ulysses S. Grant or the influence of specific battles like Wilson's Creek. Some essays shift toward social history, exploring how the war altered the lives of women, ethnic communities including Jewish Americans, and soldiers motivated by ideology and loyalty. Literary perspectives also appear, as in explorations of Walt Whitman's engagement with the war.

A strong essay on the Civil War requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad summary of events. Evidence drawn from primary sources, soldier accounts, political documents, or contemporary literature carries significant weight. The most common pitfall is treating slavery as just one cause among many equal factors; a well-supported essay grapples honestly with its central role in bringing the nation to war.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Mark Twain\'s Pudd Nhead Wilson
¶ … Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson," by Mark Twain. Specifically, it will trace the different types of irony that Twain used in the book. What are they, and why did Twain use them? Twain's use of irony throughout…
Thesis Undergraduate
On Liberty and the US Constitution
None of the issues being raised today by the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement are new, but rather they date back to the very beginning of the United States. At the time the Constitution was written in 1787, human rights and civil liberties were far more constrained than they are in the 21st Century. Only white men with property had voting rights for example, while most states still had slavery and women and children were still the property of fathers and husbands. Only very gradually was the Constitution amended to grant equal citizenship and voting rights to all, and even the original Bill of Rights was added only because the Antifederalists threatened to block ratification. In comparison, the libertarianism of John Stuart Mill in his famous book On Liberty was very radical indeed, even in 1859 much less 1789. He insisted that individuals should be left totally free to do as they pleased so long as they did no harm to others. To that extent, he would have supported the rights of OWS to protest and dissent, and been highly critical of how the authorities were suppressing the movement on the flimsiest of pretexts. As a supporter of free markets, he would also have opposed the trillions in dollars in bailout money that large banks and corporations have received from governments. On the other hand, he probably would have found the ideas of many OWS supporters too radical or socialistic, but at the same time have defended their right to assemble and demonstrate
Research Paper Doctorate
Alcohol How Effective Has the Legal Prohibition
How effective has the legal prohibition of alcohol been in controlling crime? A recent Department of Justice Report (U.S. Department of Justice) said that alcohol was a factor in 40% of all violent crimes and accounted…
Paper Doctorate
African American westward migration patterns and history
Prior to the 1960s and 1970s, very little was written about black participation in Western expansion from the colonial period to the 19th Century, much less about black and Native American cooperation against slavery.
Essay Doctorate
Ethnocentrism: concepts and cultural perspectives
Even in the most democratic of the Western capitalist nations, equal rights were not extended to all individuals until fairly recent times. Racism and ethnocentrism were built into the world political and economic…
Research Paper Doctorate
American experience with war
Which historian - David M. Kennedy, or John Shy - best represents the American experience with war?
Research Paper Doctorate
History from 1865 to 1960
¶ … American history as a radical and revolutionary society. Specifically, it will discuss the works of "The Jungle," by Upton Sinclair, and "Coming of Age in Mississippi," by Anne Moody.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Failures of Civil War Reconstruction in the South
After the close of the Civil War in 1865, the U.S. government initiated a wide-ranging policy of reconstruction aimed at rebuilding the American South. This policy, made up of a first and second reconstruction, offered…
Paper High School
Profiles on American Presidents Life and Presidency
Generally considered to be the greatest president of the United States, who freed four million slaves and saved the nation after leading the Union to victory in the Civil War of 1861-65, Abraham Lincoln was born in…
Paper Masters
Slavery Art Robert, Calvin, Martha, and William
Robert, Calvin, Martha, and William Scott and Mila ended up in the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco because its owner, Rev. William Anderson Scott, was the minister at Calvary Presbyterian Church there in 1853-61. He was originally from the South and because of his sympathy for the Confederate cause in the Civil War, including offering public prayers for Jefferson Davis, he "had to leave the city for his safety and that of his family