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Drama
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Drama is one of the oldest and most enduring forms of artistic expression, and it occupies a central place in courses ranging from literature and theatre history to education and cultural studies. Students are drawn to it because it sits at the intersection of text and performance, raising questions about how language, action, and spectacle work together to create meaning. Works such as Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House, Molière's Tartuffe, Sophocles's Oedipus, and August Wilson's Fences appear frequently in academic curricula, and frameworks like the Aristotelian approach to drama give students analytical tools for examining plot, character, and audience experience across centuries and traditions.

The essays collected here take a wide range of approaches. Some are historical, tracing drama's origins or examining seventeenth- and eighteenth-century European theatre. Others focus on close literary analysis of specific plays, including works by Suzan-Lori Parks and Robert Browning. Comparative approaches place multiple texts in conversation, while thematic studies explore how stage characters navigate family conflict, identity, and morality. Some papers extend into education, looking at how process drama can foster reading motivation, and others investigate non-Western dramatic traditions such as the Japanese Noh play as reexamined by Ezra Pound.

A strong essay on drama anchors its thesis in the relationship between dramatic form and meaning — how structure, dialogue, and stagecraft shape what an audience understands and feels. Textual evidence from the play itself carries the most weight, supported where relevant by performance context or critical frameworks. The most common pitfall is treating drama purely as literature and neglecting the fact that plays are written for the stage, where action, timing, and physical presence are essential to interpretation.

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Thesis High School
Poverty and Its Connection to Culture
It is often said that history has a tendency to repeat itself especially if the next generations fail to learn the lessons taken from the success and failures of the previous ones. Most often, this takes place in cases of war and international politics but also at the level of national, regional, and even local social and political behavior.
Paper Undergraduate
Empowering students through reading and writing
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Monuments to history: the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the Raft of the Medusa
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Paper Undergraduate
Program Evaluation of a University Theater Program
The purpose of the graduate level theater program at Metropolitan University in Manhattan, New York, is to prepare students to make meaningful contributions to the theater industry.
Paper Doctorate
Lysistrata: What Could Possibly Be
¶ … Lysistrata: What could possibly be funny about a sex strike undertaken by women on both sides of a war as a There are several points of hilarity in Aristophanes' classic Greek drama, Lysistrata.
Paper Undergraduate
Reader Response to Scott Mccloud
Because Scott McCloud's focus is exclusively on comics as an art form, his discussion of Japanese comics in chapter 2 -- while interesting -- does not draw some obvious connections between the style and method of…
Paper Doctorate
Critique on Imperialism and Orientalism in Saudi Arabia
Western Imperialisim and Orientalsim in Saudi Arabia
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Feminist Reading of Shakespeare\'s Midsummer Night\'s Dream
William Shakespeare's comedy A Midsummer Night's Dream is ostensibly concerned with heterosexual marriage, but it is seldom noted just how disturbing the play's picture of marriage seems.
Essay Undergraduate
Literary Styles in the Movie, the Tin Drum
The paper explores Volker Schlondorffs film the Tin Drum and describes the use of allegories, metaphors, and surreal aspects in the movie. The paper identifies metaphors used in the film and explains their meaning in the context of German society during the Nazi period. It also describes the meaning of allegory and surreal with reference to the war in Germany.
Essay Undergraduate
Shakespeare, Tennessee Williams and Sophocles: Use of Illusion
Sophocles, Shakespeare, And Walt Williams