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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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Essay High School
Reading responses to a poem
An analysis of John Millington Synge's "Riders to the Sea." In the paper, analysis is provided of the one-act play's structure and discusses how it is like a Greek tragedy through unity of time, place, and action. Additionally, the paper discusses how narrative and social commentary are intertwined and discusses the role that irony in terms of nature and religion has in the play.
Paper Doctorate
Blazing Saddles and the Toy Story connection
An analysis of how issues of race and social class are depicted in comedy films such as Blazing Saddles and The Toy. It is argued that commentary on race and class in Blazing Saddles is successful because of the film's narrative and satirical structure, which depicts blacks in a positive light and gives them upward social mobility. On the other hand, The Toy is unsuccessful at commenting on these issues because it not only degrades the protagonist through voluntary slavery, thus depicting downward social mobility of blacks, but also depicts whites as entitled, power-hungry megalomaniacs.
Essay Doctorate
Theatre: English-Speaking Versions of Hamlet vs. European
This paper illuminates two different interpretive approaches in 20th century theater by comparing two different ways of staging Shakespeare's Hamlet. It contrasts the more politicized Continental European view of Hamlet as a dissident with the English-speaking theater's view of Hamlet as man with a tortured individual psyche who tragically could not make up his mind.
Paper Doctorate
Examining a Contemporary Feature Film
A description and outline of a paper to be written on French New Wave cinema and how elements founded by this movement can be found in the 2009 film District 9. Among the French New Wave elements District 9 uses are a loose story line, improvised dialogue, documentary style filming, and social commentary.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Bhagavad Gita in world literature
¶ … Bhagavad-Gita is a conversation between Lord Krishna and Arjuna, narrated by the Bhisma-Parva of the Mahabharata. It is 18 chapters long, totaling 701 Sanskrit verses. Within these verses is found the basis for the…
Research Paper High School
Orthodox Judaism: history, practices, and beliefs
Orthodox Judaism considers itself the most authentic experience of Judaism dating itself back to the source of Judaism as stated in the Torah and keeping the Torah as it believes it was transmitted form Sinai. Orthodox Judaism is a hybrid of opinions and these will be described in the following essay. To better understand Orthodox Judaism, too, we have chosen the synagogue Congregation Shaare Zion as example and illustration of its form. Comparison too to Conservative, Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism will be elaborated on and mentioned as contrast
Research Paper Doctorate
Racism, Violence, and Hunger in Richard Wright's Fiction
¶ … Richard Wright's social themes (e.g., racism) in any one of his short stories. Specifically it will discuss "Black Boy," and "Native Son."
Research Paper Doctorate
Labor When IT\'s Flat on Its Back,\"
¶ … Labor When it's Flat on its Back," by Thomas Geoghegan.
Research Paper Doctorate
Parental Violence Toward Children
¶ … killing of a child in real life has no symbolic meaning, no power other than that of an expression of evil and is, therefore, one of the worst acts a human, let alone a parent, can commit.
Paper Doctorate
Vermont Social and Natural Commentary in Black and White
Vermont's rich cultural and environmental history is captured visually in black and white still photography. Each of these images offers a distinct glimpse or glance at Vermont life.