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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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Paper Undergraduate
Female Role Depicted in Greek
¶ … Female Role Depicted in Greek Mythology
Paper Undergraduate
Germanic Art and Its Influence
This paper looks at Germanic Art from the 7th century to the 9th century AD and shows how it influenced and was influenced by religion and politics. It looks at the ornamentation styles of the Germanic tribes and different art works that have been found and how these styles were incorporated into the illuminated manuscripts.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Humanities in Western civilization
The human condition is a complex field - one that in fact requires many different fields of knowledge. The different fields of knowledge that take for their object of study what it means to be human are collectively…
Paper Undergraduate
Film Auteur Theory in Tim
Film auteur theory arose as a concept between the 1950s and the early 1960s as an evaluative process putting film directors in a hierarchal genre perspective (Caughie, 1982, 62). It is the basis of film critique, that…
Paper Undergraduate
Rural School Closure: Utilitarianism, Deontology, and Research Methods
School Closure Research -- Peggy and Brian Scenario
Paper Undergraduate
Debussy and His Piano Works
The Life and Times of Claude Achille Debussy:
Paper Undergraduate
Identity Construction in Literary Texts
Representasie Van Kleurling Identiteit In Geselekteerde Tekste
Essay Doctorate
How Superpowers Used Korea as a Cold War Chessboard
¶ … 1950's Korean War, North Korea (Democratic People's Republic Korea) and South Korea (Republic Korea) Were Exploited by the Superpowers for Their Own Agendas
Paper High School
Connecting With Readers: Imagery, Symbolism,
Imagery, Symbolism, and Tone in "Facing it"
Research Paper Undergraduate
Butterfly David Henry Hwang\'s Play
David Henry Hwang's play M. Butterfly was based on a true story about a French diplomat who carried on a long-term relationship with a Chinese spy he believed was a women, but who was really a man.