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Commentary
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Commentary, as an academic subject within communications, refers to the practice of interpreting, analyzing, and responding to texts, events, cultural artifacts, and social phenomena. It appears across disciplines including literature, religious studies, media studies, philosophy, and sociology. What makes commentary academically compelling is its dual nature: it is both a form of communication itself and a method for examining how meaning is made and shared. Students engage with commentary to understand how societies reflect on their own values, power structures, and lived experiences, and to develop their own capacity for structured critical thought.

The papers archived under this topic approach commentary from a wide range of angles. Literary analysis appears in work on texts such as Paradise Lost and Sartor Resartus, where writers examine how authors comment on society, spiritual life, and human experience. Cultural and social commentary surfaces in examinations of contemporary topics like Inuit youth identity and customer satisfaction, as well as philosophical frameworks such as deontological and consequentialist ethics. Film, religion, and procedural subjects also feature, suggesting that students use commentary as both a lens and a genre across very different areas of inquiry.

A strong essay on commentary should establish a clear position on what the commentary being examined reveals — about power, society, or human experience — rather than simply summarizing the source material. Evidence drawn from close reading, historical context, or cultural analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating commentary as neutral observation; effective essays acknowledge that all commentary reflects particular perspectives and is shaped by the conditions in which it is produced.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Rabbinic Judaism: history, principles, and practices
Rabbinic Judaism began after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE and developed over the next four centuries to become the normative form of Judaism (Rabbinic Judaism). To this day, Rabbinic Judaism is…
Research Paper Doctorate
Personal philosophy across different philosophers and scientists
My philosophy over different philosophers/scientists
Paper Undergraduate
The birth of a nation
In the period after the Civil War, the United States of America was anything but united, but despite the harsh reconstruction program imposed upon the South by Congress, the country eventually healed.
Paper Doctorate
Juvenile Rights Comparisons of Protections
The realization of succinct justice in the US sometimes depends on the age of an offender. This study focuses on juvenile rights and some exception hat may apply to their situation when they have committed a crime. Juveniles are considered of a lower capacity to response and understanding, unlike adult offenders. Besides, juveniles have an access to cross-examine adverse witnesses, which is not allowed on adult offenders.
Essay Doctorate
Terrorism the American Heritage Online Dictionary Specifies
The American Heritage Online Dictionary specifies Terrorism as an illegal use or threatened use of force or physical violence by an individual or pre-arranged team against individuals or physical assets with the objective of frightening or pushing societies or governments, typically for ideological or political reasons. Provided this meaning this paper will try to clarify on how terrorism has an effect on society as an entire and how it has actually triggered alterations in existing laws as it relates to the security of all US citizens.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Marx's stages of social change and critiques of his theory
Karl Marx is highly regarded as one of the foremost authorities in economics and social structure. It is through his beliefs that the thought process of Marxism was created. Although very controversial in this thoughts and beliefs, Marx outlined, what he believed to be, a social framework for society. According to Marx, society often begins a series of transformations directly related to the primary flow of labor and production (Singer, 200). Through division of labor each organizational structure has a central conflict. According to Marx, each organizational structure is characterized with conflict among different parts of society with particular emphasis on economic status. Marx focused a disproportionate amount of his research on the social relationships between the economic classes prevailing in society
Paper Undergraduate
Madame Bovary: A Woman Who
A woman who had laid on herself such sacrifices could well allow herself certain whims. She bought a Gothic prie-dieu, and in a month spent fourteen francs on lemons for polishing her nails; she wrote to Rouen for a…
Research Paper Doctorate
The Dead Sea Scrolls
According to Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh, the Dead Sea Scrolls, since their discovery in the Judaean desert and their arrival at the various institutions that retain them today, have created "a contradiction.
Essay Doctorate
Social Science Research Are Qualitative and Quantitative
The two main paradigms in social science research are qualitative and quantitative research methods. Qualitative research is believed to operate from a subjective, constructionist view of reality, whereas quantitative research operates from an objective, positivist viewpoint of the world. There has been quite a bit of debate over the merits of each of these approaches, often with one paradigm belittling the assumptions of the other. The current literature review explores the philosophical foundations of each paradigm, compares their practical differences, and discusses the strengths and weakness of both approaches as they relate to as they relate to research in the social sciences and to human resources research. The rationale for mixed-methods research, where the two paradigms are combined, is also discussed.
Paper Masters
Sartor Resartus Thomas Carlyle\'s Sartor
In his novel Sartor Resartus, Thomas Carlyle examines the foundations of meaning and finds them in clothing. Clothing serves as a symbol for all meaning-making, and Carlyle demonstrates how meaning is an arbitrary, human creation. This has ramifications for society, politics, and most notably, religion, because it demonstrates how the majority of earthly power wielded by the religious is the result of social custom rather than divine right.