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Classical Period
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The Classical Period is a foundational subject in arts education, examined across courses in art history, music history, Western civilization, and cultural studies. It encompasses the artistic, architectural, and musical traditions of ancient Greece and Rome, as well as later movements that consciously revived or responded to classical ideals. The period raises compelling academic questions about how formal principles — proportion, balance, harmony, and clarity — shaped creative production across centuries and disciplines, and how those principles were reinterpreted during transitions such as the shift from Medieval to Renaissance Europe.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on visual analysis, examining pottery, mixing bowls, and sculptural details — paying close attention to the face, base, scale, and decorative elements of individual objects. Others adopt comparative frameworks, contrasting the Classical Period with the Baroque, or tracing relationships across twelve periods of Western civilization. Literary analysis appears as well, with attention to ancient Greek narrative. Musical close reading is another strong thread, with formal and tonal analyses of works by Beethoven, including the Piano Sonata Op. 110 and the Waldstein Sonata, as well as examinations of Baroque oratorio through the work of G. F. Handel.

A strong essay on this topic needs a clearly bounded thesis — covering all of classical antiquity and its revivals in a single paper leads to superficiality. The most persuasive arguments are grounded in specific formal evidence: visual details, structural features, or musical elements that directly support the interpretive claim. A common pitfall is using "classical" loosely without defining which period, tradition, or set of principles the essay actually addresses.

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Paper Undergraduate
Discourses of world politics
Herz (1957) surmises that the once understood concept of the sovereign nation-state has become doubtful due to a variety of factors. These uncertainties, he continues, are the result of specific fundamental changes in…
Research Paper Undergraduate
A basic history of western art
What conclusions can you draw about the social, political, economic and aesthetic values of the 3 cultures (Prehistoric, Ancient, Egyptian) if all you had was their art on which to base your interpretation?
Paper Undergraduate
Derrida, Foucault, Plato, and Aristotle: philosophical perspectives
Philosophy is often mistakenly viewed as a single trajectory, leading from Socrates to Plato to Aristotle and through the rest of the classical period, hibernating somewhat during the Dark Ages, and being restored again…
Paper Undergraduate
Nude Religion Influenced the Artistic
Religion influenced the artistic manifestations of the human kind since its early ages. During the medieval and Renaissance times, the art in the Western world was particularly influenced by religion.
Paper Doctorate
Book review of Germany in the age of Bismarck
Michel Foucault's Madness and Civilization is a complex work with so many different themes that it requires strenuous and concentrated reading to understand and retain Foucault's argument. The material then needs a review in order to reflect and critically engage with the reading. This kind of book is no light reading nor can it be done within a few hours. It needs a pen in hand or a luminescent marker to wade through the lines. The reader, too, needs to know that best results demand that he absorb this book in small bites in order to read, reflect, and reread before continuing with other sectors of the book. The following essay is a review of the book.
Research Paper Doctorate
Shinto and Japanese society
The relationship between Shinto or Shintoism and the Japanese society is akin to the one between the proverbial egg and chicken. It is arguable whether the Shinto religion has molded the Japanese society or the Japanese…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Realism: philosophical perspectives and historical development
Realism: Monet and Debussy as Precursors of 20th Century Modernism
Research Paper Doctorate
Tchaikovsky and Romantic Period Tchaikovsky
The artifacts which reveal the most about our society give us information not only about the culture in which it was created and the place the creator held within that society, but also show us a reflection of that…
Research Paper Doctorate
Free Were the Ancient Greeks to Live
¶ … Free were the Ancient Greeks to Live their Lives as they Chose?
Paper High School
Art therapy: principles, practices, and therapeutic applications
Art therapy is a form of psychological treatment that manly deals with the introduction and interaction with artistic media as its primary mode of communication. Registered art therapists practice this therapeutic technique to treat people belonging to various age groups such as children, adults and even the elderly. Clients or patients who are subjected to the art therapy may be confronted with a wide range of problems and difficulties, disabilities or diagnoses. These various issues and problems may include emotional depression, or mental health issues, learning or physical limitations such as organ damages or in most cases the brain injury or neurological dysfunctions in the body. Art therapy may be subjected to patients in the form of groups or individuals depending upon the client's needs about the outcomes to achieve.