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Europe
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What is Europe?

Europe as a topic draws students across history, political science, cultural studies, business, and linguistics courses. Its scope spans ancient foundations, medieval formations, early modern transformations, and twentieth-century upheavals, making it one of the most layered subjects in academic writing. The period from 1870 to 1914, the medieval origins of European identity, the Americanization of the continent after 1945, and the cultural transmissions of the Italian Renaissance all represent threads that courses regularly ask students to examine. Mark Mazower's work on Europe's dark political history and Patrick Geary's challenge to nationalist mythology appear as direct reference points, grounding essays in serious historiographical debate.

Archived papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Historical analysis dominates, with essays tracing religious contact between Europe and the Islamic world, the spread of the Black Plague, and the causes and consequences of World War II. Cultural and intellectual history surfaces in work on Surrealism and French Francophone movements, the Armory Show's transatlantic influence, and the linguistic roots of Celtic language families. Business-oriented papers shift toward strategic and economic analysis, using European firms like Ryanair as case studies and building global strategy frameworks around the continent's markets.

A strong essay on Europe requires a clearly bounded thesis — choosing a specific period, region, or problem rather than attempting to address the continent as a whole. Evidence drawn from primary sources, named theoretical frameworks, or close readings of historical texts carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating Europe as a uniform entity; the strongest work acknowledges internal divisions of language, politics, and culture and builds that complexity directly into its argument.

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Paper Masters
Critical analysis of four academic articles
This paper compares two articles from European-based newspapers (one German, the other British) with two articles in American newspapers. The American newspaper articles tend to be more individualistic and localized in their content. They focus more exclusively on America and are less concerned with contextualizing the issue in an international perspective.
Paper Doctorate
The wretched of the earth
This paper discusses the book "The Wretched of the Earth." In this text, the author explains the psychological difficulties that affect people who have been colonized by empire nations. They will have lost everything that gave them a unique cultural identity. Learning violence from the oppressors, they will likely turn to violence in order to be free.
Paper Doctorate
Viruses Are a Stubborn Mechanism
Viruses are a stubborn mechanism of spreading disease. Viruses rarely die off, but rather go dormant for periods of time only to emerge and spread causing pandemics for new generations of people.
Research Paper Doctorate
Little Women and Popular Culture
Little Women, Louisa May Alcott's defining work, which brought her much fame in her time, is a biographical account of her family. In the book, her father Amos Bronson is Mr. March and her mother Abigail May is Marmee,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Education concepts and applications
Apex Middle School, part of the wake county public school system in Raleigh, NC has implemented a rigorous curriculum for grades 6, 7 and 8. The curriculum for Apex Middle School includes the following: Language Arts,…
Research Paper Masters
French Revolution for Many People, the French
This paper answered the following questions: How did a revolution that began by seeking liberty and equality turn into one that by 1794 had resorted to a policy of terror? Included in the answer are the response to the following questions: 1) What brought about the revolution in 1789? 2) What reforms the first revolution sought and why it didn't survive (why it wasn't the end of the revolution)? 3) What reforms did the second revolution seek and which did they achieve? 4) Why did the revolutionary government resort to a policy of terror in 1793-94?
Thesis Masters
Security and Co-Operation in Europe the Topics
The topics before the Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe (OSCE) are: Combating Human Trafficking; Supporting Post-Conflict Stabilization and Institution- Building in Kyrgyzstan; and Energy Supply as a…
Paper Doctorate
Issues Around Accepting Jews in Europe in 1781
Acceptance of Jews in 18th Century Europe
Research Paper Doctorate
History of communication
(with special reference to the development of the motorcycle)
Thesis Undergraduate
Writings of Clare of Assisi and female power
Saint Clare of Assisi was not a feminist in the modern sense, but then again no such ideas existed at all in the 13th Century. By all accounts, though, she was a formidable and powerful woman who was the first in…