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What is Comparison Essays (Examples)?

A comparison essay is an essay that looks at two or more different things and then draws comparisons between the two of them.  A comparison essay may include comparison and contrast elements or may focus strictly on comparing similar elements.  However, it must, by definition, contain at least two distinct things to be compared. 

In the introduction of your comparison essay, you want to interview the things that you want to compare.  The easiest way to do so is with a blanket statement suggesting that the two things are similar.  You can do this by saying that they both fall into the same category or share the same characteristics.  Then, the introduction is a great place to provide an outline of the rest of your comparison essay, previewing how you will demonstrate the two things are similar.  This is particularly important if the two items do not have any obvious similarities. 

The body of your comparison essay is going to focus on further development of the similarities between the items that you are comparing.  If you provided a blueprint of how you were going to show their similarities in your outline, then you want to follow that blueprint in your body paragraph.  For each point of similarity that you make, you want to make sure that you are showing how all of your items have the same qualities.  Furthermore, unless you are specifically writing a comparison/contrast essay, you want to avoid writing about contrast in the body of your essay.  Instead, focus only on how the items are similar.    

As with most academic essays, in the conclusion of your comparison essay you want to provide a mirror of the introduction of that essay.  Reiterate that the items are similar and the reasons you gave to support that assertion.  If their similarities have additional relevance, mention it in the conclusion section.    

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Paper Doctorate
Poetry exploring themes of struggle and adversity
This paper compares the common theme of struggle in the works of the African-American poets Dunbar, Hughes, and Dove. All three poets use metaphors and other poetic imagery to talk about the suffering of their people in a method that is covert rather than explicit. This enables them to deal with sensitive topics such as racism and sexism in a manner that takes even an unwitting, resistant reader by surprise.
Paper Undergraduate
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Paper Doctorate
Australian Indigenous identity and cultural perspectives
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Essay Doctorate
Magnetic resonance imaging: history, types, principles, and clinical applications
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Research Paper Doctorate
Romeo and Juliet in the Movies
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Research Paper Doctorate
Genome Sequencing and Comparative Genomics
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Research Paper Doctorate
Wild Species, Which Includes That of Animals,
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Research Paper Doctorate
International marketing strategies and applications
Kotabe, of Kotabe and Helsen (2001), Global Marketing Management, John Wiley & Sons, New York, discusses timing of product entry decisions related to global rollout and simultaneous entry.
Research Paper Doctorate
Buddhism and Jean Smith's theological contributions
Buddhism is a unique religion: it doesn't worship any deity nor does it require any individual to live their lives through divine will. Approximately 2,500 years ago, when Buddha achieved enlightenment he spent the next…