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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
Marina Budhos\'s Novel \"Ask Me
Marina Budhos's novel "Ask Me No Questions" presents an episode in the life of an illegal immigrant Bangladesh family in the U.S. One of the central characters in the story, Aisha, is an ambitious young woman and seems…
Research Paper Doctorate
Immigration and Health Policies in the 20th Century
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
Research Paper Doctorate
Use of Hypnosis in Memory Retrieval
In recent years there has been a myriad of books and articles written concerning the use of hypnosis and memory retrieval. Aside from the clinical application of hypnosis in treating a variety of psychiatric disorders,…
Essay Undergraduate
Role of Environment in Shaping American Indian Storytelling
This essay deals with two Native American authors, N. Scott Monday and Sherman Alexie, and their respective novels. They explain through their stories, the interconnectedness of time, the importance of memory, and the history of their culture. They use environment such as beliefs, animals, etc, to convey their tales and hopefully help the reader retain their memory.
Thesis Doctorate
Joy Kogawa's Obasan: themes and significance
The dance between the silent stone and the language stream is performed throughout Naomi's narrative in the text. Naomi experiences "water and stone dancing" in her dreams and in her life reality, but the barriers to reconciliation remain unless and until the silence is broken (Kogawa 1981, 247). Naomi was able to surmount the hidden barriers and move beyond her fragmented understanding to find a cohesive element "that joins water and stone, speech and silence, memory and forgetfulness in a ‘quiet ballet, soundless as breath' (Kogawa 1981, 296, as cited in Goellnict 1989, 297). Naomi comes to believe that silence does not always stand as a barrier to understanding and in this way is able to validate in her own mind the silence of her mother. With her mother dead, no prospect for communication between mother and children exists—except in the silence that remains (Goellnict 1989). And for Naomi, though the communication between them can never be complete, it is a communication of understanding that Naomi accepts as sufficient (Goellnict 1989).
Essay Doctorate
Operational definitions and observable variables in scientific research
The author of this short report is asked to review a series of six claims that are supposedly scientific and fact-based in nature and review them for efficacy and whether they can be support.
Paper Undergraduate
Applying to the Masters Program in Special
¶ … applying to the Masters Program in Special Education because I see it as the next logical step for my career development. I have recently completed by Bachelor's Degree in Teaching for Health/Physical Education.
Research Paper Doctorate
Black Markets: Drug, Nuclear, and Human Trafficking
Introduction to black markets, and why they exist
Paper Undergraduate
Assembling Culture Archives Documents Exhibitions
This paper looks at archival evidence collected over the past forty years regarding the beliefs of the people in the rural southern appalachian mountains. The archive examined had a gross amount of information so it was necessary to take just a small portion of it to write this paper. The beliefs encompass religion, ghost stories and other beliefs and how they were used to shape culture.
Essay Doctorate
Analysis of chapters 4 and 5 from a psychology perspective
This is a five page paper. It is a five page paper that analyzes two chapters of a book. The book is by Jerome Bruner and is called Actual Minds, Possible Worlds. The chapters used for analysis are only chapters 4 (The Transactional Self) and Chapter 5 (about Vygotsky). The topic is psychology, but the book discusses consciousness from a philosophical and linguistic perspective too.