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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 Doctorate
Dis-Missal of the Great French Fairy Tale
French fairytales and literature are indeed a topic that is worth discussing. This is because the work compiled by the French writers, back in the 17th and 18th century is still part of the English as well as French literature. Nowadays, the term fairy tale is used by many people to refer to the magical stories that are told to small children. This word has actually been derived from the French term "Conte de Fees", which was a label given to a couple of tales written for adults in the 17th century (Windling). Many people are not aware of the fact that even the magical stories that are told to children today, Sleeping Beauty, The White Deer, Donkeyskin and Cinderella (to name a few), are in fact adaptations from the simpler versions of the French folk tales (Windling).
Research Paper Doctorate
William Mcdougall: Problems With Instinct
William McDougall was an experimental psychologist and theorist who believed in a holistic psychology that integrated all of the tools available to help understand the human psyche.
Paper Undergraduate
South Korean government humanitarian aid policy toward North Korea
The Cold War ended throughout most of the world in 1991 but has continued in earnest on the Korean Peninsula as two countries united by culture and ethnicity continue to battle for position. The history of both nations is reviewed and compared and the strengths of both economies are examined. The future of Korea is studied.
Paper Doctorate
Scarface- Latin American Culture Scarface
Scarface (1932) film is a an American gangster movie, written by Ben Hecht, directed by Richard Rosson and Howard Hawks, and produced by Howard Hughes.Tony Montana turns out to be a drug league key player. Al Pacino has the power to terminate anyone in the picture, and he is as unpredictable, as a person, as his traits are also unpredictable on the screen. The Babylon club is the unauthorized command center of, ‘the Cuban crime wave", and Montana is an active person in the corrosive inclination.
Paper Doctorate
Indira Gandhi (India), Empress Myeongseong (Korea), Queen
Indira Gandhi, Empress Myeongseong, and Queen Hatshepsut reflect differences and similarities in the way they served their Indian, Japanese, and Egypt ancient societies respectively. The three differ in the methods used to administer their authority, quality adopted, and formation of alliances. The similarity comes in the sense of methods used to suppress riots in the society. How the female icons were worshipped in the society, are also similar and different based on monuments and items used
Research Paper Doctorate
Holden Caulfield vs. Equality 7-2521: Individual and Society
The individual vs. society -- the normal, adolescent isolation and angst of Catcher in the Rye's Holden Caufield and the abnormal Anthem of pain of Ayn Rand's Equality 7-2521
Research Paper Undergraduate
Rise of Cato the Elder
Severely criticized for the damages brought upon other peoples and, in the same time, highly praised for its achievements, the Roman Empire was in fact the predecessor of today's modern constitution which divides the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Salvador Dali and surrealism
Salvador Dali was born on May 11, 1904 in the small Catalan town of Figueras, Northern Spain (Great Masters 1999). His father was a well-known notary but respected his artistic talent, which surfaced at an early age.
Paper Undergraduate
Personal attributes and their characteristics
Every one of us has our spoken and unspoken fears and hopes, our dreams for the future and our trepidations about it too. Yet what is the galvanizing force that lifts some to heights of achievement yet crushes others as…
Paper Doctorate
Comparison and contrast of selected topics
This paper examines the similarities and differences between the 1970s sitcom I Dream of Jeannie and today's sitcom South Park. The two are approach humor differently and yet an analysis of two specific episodes shows that the overall object of both series is to appeal to an innocent part of human nature.