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Dreams
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Dreams appear across multiple academic disciplines, making them a genuinely cross-cutting subject for students. In psychology and social science courses, dreams are examined as windows into unconscious thought, emotional processing, and mental health. Freudian psychoanalytic theory treats dreams as central evidence for understanding the unconscious mind, and papers engaging with that framework explore how dream interpretation became foundational to a broader theory of human psychology. Beyond clinical psychology, dreams surface in literature courses through works like A Raisin in the Sun and A Midsummer Night's Dream, where the concept carries metaphorical weight about aspiration, identity, and social possibility.

The papers archived under this topic take several distinct approaches. Some are explanatory and scientific, investigating sleep cycles and the biological or psychological reasons humans dream. Others are psychoanalytic, focusing specifically on Freud's theoretical position and what it contributes to understanding the mind. A number of papers take a literary or cultural angle, analyzing how dreams function symbolically in narratives tied to family, identity, and ambition. Personal and reflective writing also appears, connecting individual dream experiences to broader questions about life, society, and self-understanding.

A strong essay on dreams begins by clearly committing to one disciplinary lens — clinical, literary, or cultural — rather than trying to cover all three at once. Evidence carries the most weight when it is specific: a close reading of a text, a clearly explained theoretical framework, or a well-supported psychological claim. The most common pitfall is treating "dreams" too loosely, allowing the essay to drift between metaphorical ambition and literal sleep phenomena without acknowledging the distinction.

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Paper Undergraduate
Waking life and consciousness in dreams
Have you ever experienced the sensation that you are dreaming but cannot wake up? In Richard Linklater's 2001 film Waking Life, this is the plight of the main character: he knows he is dreaming but cannot alter this fact.
Research Paper Doctorate
Hypnosis in Modern Western Medicine: History and Clinical Use
Proven and Effective: The Continued use of Hypnosis in Modern Western Medicine
Thesis Undergraduate
The Great Gatsby: Reinvention and the American Dream
"The 1920s were characterized by conservatism, affluence, and cultural frivolity, yet it was also a time of social economic and political change. The first modern decade in American history paved the way for the reforms of the 1930s. American popular culture began to reflect an urban, industrial, consumer oriented society" (Ingui, 89). The strong economic boom following the Great War gave birth to a time known as "The Roaring 20's. This was a prosperous era, characterized largely by wealth and change. "President Calvin Coolidge declared that the business of America was business. In many ways, his statement defined the 1920s. Amid all the tensions, an unprecedented flood of new consumer items entered the marketplace, and progressive calls for government regulation were rejected in favor of a revival of the old free enterprise individualism" (Hermansen).
Research Paper Doctorate
Selling Detergents A. Executive Summary
The product selected for study is the mundane detergent. Study of detergent markets give the person a complete idea into the market development and growth as this has been one of the first products to reach a developed…
Research Paper Doctorate
Understanding human motivation and behavior
¶ … girlfriend's house a couple weeks ago, her little brother Tommy got sent home from middle school for "inappropriate behavior" (fighting). We were surprised because he never gets in fights.
Paper High School
Comparison and contrast analysis of key concepts
This paper discusses Guy de Maupassant's short story "The Necklace" and Kate Chopin's short story "The Story of an Hour." Specifically, the paper looks at gender roles within the worlds of these two stories that both take place within a paternalistic society. The paper compares and contrasts the two stories paying special attention to the ways in which Mathilde from "The Necklace" and Louise from "The Story of an Hour" are oppressed.
Research Paper Doctorate
Immigrant agency and adaptation in America: three historical examples
Surviving Immigration: The Role of Agencies
Essay Doctorate
Impressionism and Surrealism: artistic movements and characteristics
Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement that originated with a group of Paris-based artists whose independent exhibitions brought them to prominence during the 1870s and 1880s (Rewald, 1973, p.
Paper Undergraduate
Cultural family background and its effects on development
¶ … young Americans any consideration of their cultural background is deemed irrelevant to their daily lives. Having been a part of American culture for several generations, they look beyond themselves as being purely…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Thornton Wilder\'s Play Our Town
Thornton Wilder's play Our Town conveys a part Buddhist, part Americana theme. The playwright achieves a unique ambiance through a spartan set, an equally minimalist plot, and an existentialist tone.