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Context
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What is Context?

Context, as an academic subject in English studies, refers to the surrounding conditions, background, and circumstances that shape how a text, event, issue, or argument is understood. Students across a wide range of disciplines encounter this concept because meaning rarely exists in isolation — whether examining a case study, analyzing a book, or researching a social issue, writers must situate their subject within relevant historical, cultural, institutional, or situational frameworks. The ability to identify and interpret context is considered a foundational academic skill, helping students move beyond surface-level description toward genuine critical understanding.

The papers gathered here reflect a broad range of approaches, all united by the need to establish and analyze context carefully. Some take a case-study format, examining specific organizations, individuals, or scenarios — such as leadership dynamics, brewing company ethics, or marketing strategies — to understand how particular circumstances shape outcomes. Others approach context through comparison, as in contrasting quality management frameworks, or through historical and developmental lenses, as seen in work on graduate education and the global peace movement. Literary and theoretical angles also appear, including analysis of ritual language and myth alongside a book report engaging with psychological themes.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a clearly scoped thesis that specifies which type of context matters most — historical, social, professional, or otherwise — and why it is relevant to the central argument. Evidence drawn from credible sources, direct engagement with the subject matter, and attention to how context actually shifts interpretation all carry significant weight. A common pitfall is treating context as mere background filler; instead, it should actively inform the analysis and remain connected to the essay's core claims throughout.

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Paper Undergraduate
Faith When Hans-Georg Gadamer Argues
This paper examines Hans-Georg Gadamer's conception of faith in order to determine the legitimacy of faith. Using David Hume's work on miracles as a guide, one can analyze Gadamer's claim in order to see if it holds up to scrutiny. Ultimately, it does not, because what Gadamer describes as faith, a "unique" phenomenon, is in reality merely a single flavor of the multifarious unfounded claims that can be found everywhere.
Paper Undergraduate
Wittgenstein Ludwig Wittgenstein Is Particularly Interesting Because
Ludwig Wittgenstein is particularly interesting because in Philosophical Investigations (PI) he repudiated all of his earlier work in logical positivism and the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (TLP), along with much of what was traditionally thought of as philosophy, and took a radically new track in the last twenty years of his life. Young Wittgenstein was more certain that he had solved all major philosophical problems, while the older Wittgenstein had completely lost all such certainties. There were even hints in his earlier work of this later, more explicit existential despair, pessimism and even cynicism about the limits of philosophy, which certainly became more profound over the years. He was no longer able to view the world as consisting of facts that were logical representations of objects that really existed or at least had the potential to exist.
Paper Undergraduate
Meta theories and their applications
There are various meta-theories that have been presented on the topic of human development and these can be related to aging. This paper looks at three meta-theories of development and how the relate to aging. These meta-theories are the evolutionary psychology theory, developmental systems theory and advaita philosophy theory.
Paper Masters
Accepting change in work and personal life
Change is inevitable in all phases of life, whether at work or in our personal lives. Everybody acknowledges that nothing lasts forever. However, for some reason, we all behave as if certain things are supposed to last…
Paper Doctorate
Regional organizations: structures, roles, and functions
The African Continent is rich in resource, populace and cultural diversity. Its potential for achievement remains great. Yet, throughout history it has been a victim, either of exploitation by outsiders or of its own…
Paper Undergraduate
Supreme Court Cases Douglas v.
Douglas v. Independent Living Center of Southern California, Douglas v. California Pharmacist Association, and Douglas v. Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital (consolidated) - Docket No. 09-958, 09-1158 and 10-283 - The…
Paper Undergraduate
Entrepreneurship concepts and practices
¶ … Entrepreneurship-Hop, makes amusing use of rhymes to describe this author's perceptions of differences in entrepreneurship across countries. He thinks that Americans lack soul and take quantitative approaches that…
Paper Undergraduate
Slave Narratives and the Dispelling
As time passes, those who can connect us to moments in the history of a fledgling America pass with it. A failure to record their experiences in some capacity is tantamount to a closing window on a bygone chapter.
Paper Undergraduate
Logic of Life by Tim
In the Logic of Life, author Tim Harford uncovered the economics behind some of the most popular issues in people's everyday lives, issues that the general public think are irrational or too complex to understand.
Paper Undergraduate
Tartuffe, Swift and Voltaire in His Own
In his own way, Moliere's Tartuffe represents one aspect of the Enlightenment, if only a negative one, since he is a purely self-interested individual who cares only about advancing his own wealth and status. He is a fraud, a con artist and a hypocrite who puts on a show of religion but is really only interested in stealing Orgon's estate—and his wife. Orgon is too foolish to understand this until the end, although his wise and cunning servant Dorine understands Tartuffe's intentions almost immediately. In this case, the uneducated servant is far more intelligent and clever than her master, who even seems callously indifferent to the illness of his wife.