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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven": Suspense, Symbolism & Madness
¶ … Raven," by Edgar Allan Poe tells the story of a man who laments the loss of his lover while a raven slowly drives him mad by repeating the same word: nevermore. Poe is employing a theme he is most comfortable with…
Research Paper Doctorate
Reviving a Mature Business: Leadership and Culture Change at PMF
Reviving a Company: How to Bring New Life to a Mature Business
Paper Undergraduate
Black Rain (1989): Memory, Denial, and Hiroshima's Legacy
War is always a collective historical event that survives in official government records and propaganda as well as mass media images and academic and popular writing. Of course, not all individual experiences can be captured by the collective memory, national consciousness and official interpretations of events, and in some cases governments and established elites attempt to censor and repress collective memory. With Hiroshima and Nagasaki, collective denial, cover ups and repression of public memories occurred for decades after the war, while many veterans who returned to Japan in 1945 were deeply dissatisfied by the official version of collective memory and sought to alter the national consciousness. In Black Rain, the family patriarch would also like to repress and deny the events of the recent past, but his niece and lover were so obviously victimized and damaged by the war that in the end he is simply unable to do so.
Paper Doctorate
Baseball and the American Character
Baseball and the American Character "America has rolled by like an army of steamrollers. It has been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt, and erased again, but baseball has marked the time. This field, this game, it's a part of our past, Ray. It reminds us of all that was once good and could be good again" (James Earl Jones in Field of Dreams). Introduction Why is baseball linked to the American cultural experience and why do some say baseball is a reflection of American exceptionalism? Is baseball still America's national game because the American culture needs a pastoral outlet as an escape from big city pollution, political corruption and crime? If that is not true, then why is baseball so important to the culture of America? These questions and others will be brought up in this essay.
Paper Undergraduate
Eugene O\'Neill\'s Mythic Re-Enactments
This paper examines Eugene O'Neill's use of the mythic structure of Aeschylus' Oresteia in his trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra. The play suggests that O'Neill's play is built around acts of repetition and re-enactment: not only does O'Neill himself re-enact the Oresteia, but his characters seem to ritually re-enact the behavior of those who have gone before. The play connects Mannon's death in the play to a ritualized re-enactment of the death of Abraham Lincoln.
Paper Undergraduate
Responsible journalism: principles and practice
How the Press Covers the Most Important Events of Our Existence
Paper Undergraduate
Story Diagram and Narrative Analysis: On the Waterfront
Framing crime drama: the police know that dockworker's union boss Johnny Friendly is involved with organized crime but cannot get any useful witness to snitch on him
Paper Doctorate
Movie Adaptations, it Is Often
¶ … movie adaptations, it is often difficult to make a selection of which do you prefer over what. The case becomes a challenge in itself when say you have read the book in your early teenage years and years later when…
Essay Masters
Shakespeare Final Opportunity for Reflection and Writing
This quote comes from Shakespeare's Hamlet. Francisco and Bernardo are two guards standing watch in the middle of the night at the castle Elsinore. This is the second line of the play, spoken by Francisco in response to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare\'s Antony and Cleopatra Love and Poetic
Love and Poetic Imagery in Shakespeare's "Antony and Cleopatra."