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Dance
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Dance is one of the oldest human art forms, and it occupies a significant place in academic study across disciplines including art history, cultural studies, gender studies, performance studies, and education. Its academic interest lies in how movement functions simultaneously as artistic expression, social ritual, and cultural identity. Students encounter dance as a subject in courses ranging from humanities surveys to specialized seminars, where they examine how different societies use movement to communicate values, negotiate power, and mark historical moments. The intersection of dance with music, theater, and visual culture—as seen in discussions connecting dance to theatrical frameworks and to the social spaces depicted by painters like Manet—makes it a rich site for interdisciplinary inquiry.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Historical and cultural analysis appears in work on medieval dance and on indigenous practices such as those of the Navajo. Film and performance analysis drives essays on musicals like Singin' in the Rain and West Side Story, treating these works as historical documents that illuminate their eras. Some papers take a comparative or fusion perspective, examining how dance forms borrow from and transform one another. Others focus on identity and power, particularly through gender and sexuality studies frameworks, while pedagogical approaches appear in work centered on teaching children dance. Japanese Butoh and its relationship to Artaud's theater represents yet another angle, linking movement to avant-garde performance theory.

A strong essay on dance grounds its argument in a specific form, context, or performance rather than treating dance as a vague abstraction. Effective evidence includes close analysis of movement, staging, or choreographic choices, supported by relevant cultural or historical context. When analyzing film or staged performance, connecting visual and musical elements to broader social meaning strengthens the argument considerably. The most common pitfall is letting description substitute for analysis—summarizing what happens in a performance without explaining what it reveals about society, identity, or artistic tradition.

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Paper Doctorate
Day of the Dead Skeleton Calavera Art
Anthropology is the study of objects in terms of their positioning and existence. It is an ethnographic approach for tracing things or people. The study of things can also take social contextual where tracing of the object follows its circulation The Day of the Dead has artistic representations, and commemorations from different aspects. In the Mexican culture, there is the belief that dead people watch over the living. This calls for decorations on tombs during December 1 and 2nd when Mexicans decorate tombstones with sculptures sugar candies. There are several interpretations of the Day of the Dead. The Calaveras has become a significant aspect in the celebrations of the day of the dead through its prominent use in the festive. The Mexican society has a special connection with death represented by rituals practiced in their culture when people die
Paper Doctorate
Krispy Kreme Ads Company Overview
The Think Inside the Box (TISB) campaign is focused on consumers who are busy, work in social settings, do not like presumption, prefer to know that the product they purchase is consistent, and in their busy lifestyle, can be a lifestyle reward. We know that the modern consumer in the developed world is assaulted with advertising messages 24/7 in almost every location.
Thesis Doctorate
Musical Theatre From Musical to Film it
It is rare to find a quality musical that is beautifully adapted from the stage onto the screen. In fact, throughout the years, American cinema has ping-ponged between deaths and revivals where musical film adaptations…
Thesis Masters
Music and Drugs as Escape in Baldwin's "Sonny's Blues"
This paper discusses James Baldwin's short story "Sonny's Blues." In this story, a young man is trying to get over his addiction to heroin. He replaces this addiction with the love of playing jazz music on the piano. In reality, the drugs and the piano-playing serve the same purpose: to fill a void inside that has been left by suffering through life.
Paper Undergraduate
Doctorate of Psychology Program
Thank you in advance for your consideration of my application to be accepted into the Psy D. program at Marshall University. I am competent, committed, and caring undergraduate student at Marshall with a powerful work…
Paper Doctorate
Comparison of protagonists in Araby and A&P
John Updike's "A&P" and James Joyce's "Araby" are very alike. The theme of the two stories centers on a young men who are concerned over thinking out the dissimilarity between reality and the imaginations of romance…
Thesis Undergraduate
Le Grand Hautbois and Baroque Wind Music at Louis XIV's Court
During the reign of Louis XIII and especially Louis XIV, the courts were alive with new Baroque music and instruments. Many new wind instruments were being created with a variety of innovations and some other…
Research Paper Masters
African culture: history, traditions, and contemporary expressions
Both Ba and Ngugi based their story on African Culture during pre-colonial period. They portray aspects such as tradition, religion, diversity of culture and how they were affected by colonialism. Ba's theme of racism and discrimination of Africans is brought out clearly in the book with the two main characters Ousmane and Mirelle. Ngugi on the other hand has emphasized the them of rivalry, between the two ridges brought about in the book.
Research Paper Doctorate
Origin of Ancient Nepal
Neolithic tools found in the Kathmandu Valley indicate that people were living in the Himalayan region in the distant past, although their culture and artifacts are only slowly being explored.
Essay Masters
Anxieties of White Mississippians Concerning the Institution of Slavery
Anxieties of White Mississippians Regarding Slavery Introduction In Bradley G. Bond's book Mississippi: A Documentary History, the author describes in great detail the restlessness and anxiety that white folks in Mississippi felt with reference to the institution of slavery. Bond describes the growth of slavery, what crops made it necessary for Southern landowners to purchase more slaves, the laws that pertained to the behavior of slave owners and slaves, and more. This paper reviews and critiques the Antebellum Slavery chapter (4) in Bond's book. Antebellum Slavery The Code Noir was a law that was enacted in Louisiana in 1724, likely the first such law that was designed to lay out in particulars as to what was expected of slave owners and slaves. At that time in Mississippi, there was a great deal of tobacco and indigo being grown but not a lot of cotton. When landowners began to realize that cotton was more profitable and in greater need in Europe and elsewhere, they started planting cotton in much greater quantities; and that, in turn, required more hands to do the labor. Hence, the demand for slaves increased as the boom in cotton growing began in the 1790s (Bond, 65).