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European
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The study of Europe as a subject spans multiple academic disciplines, including history, political science, sociology, anthropology, and cultural studies. Students write about European topics because the continent has played a central and often contested role in shaping global systems of power, trade, colonization, and cultural exchange. Courses that examine empire, race, international relations, and world history frequently ask students to engage with how European nations expanded their influence and what consequences followed for societies across Africa, the Americas, and beyond.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a comparative historical angle, examining events such as civil conflicts in Spain and Greece side by side to identify shared causes and diverging outcomes. Others focus on colonial settlement, imperialism in Africa, and the experiences of enslaved Africans, drawing on works like Levine's Black Culture and Black Consciousness. Additional papers address international trade, racial and ethnic relations, and the identity of groups such as Afrikaners, showing that the topic extends well beyond European borders into questions of diaspora, resistance, and cultural formation.

A strong essay on a European topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond broad generalization. Rather than claiming that Europe simply "changed the world," effective papers identify a specific mechanism — colonial policy, trade networks, ethnic conflict — and support it with concrete historical or textual evidence. The most common pitfall is treating Europe as a monolithic actor; acknowledging internal divisions of nation, class, and ideology consistently produces more credible and nuanced analysis.

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Essay Doctorate
Writer and digital literacy in information technology
This essay shows that imperialism was largely lauded by Western colonializers. According to them they were educating the illiterate; teaching the savage the ways of Jesus Christ; showing the primitive how to till and cultivate his soil as well as manage his business; and, in all ways, positively affecting the inferior race with the gentility and keener intelligence of the superior. Others admitted their stake of personal self-interest, but pegged on the same rationalizations: they were benefitting the inferior savage by occupying his land.
Research Paper Doctorate
Country-specific analysis and characteristics
History as defined in Thailand concentrates more on the Thai people, and not on the history of people living in the present day area defined as being Thailand. This history can be divided into two parts - before…
Paper Undergraduate
Fascination and repulsion from Otherness in Song of Kali and The City of Joy
In this chapter, I examine similarities and differences between The City of Joy by Dominique Lapierre (1985) and Song of Kali by Dan Simmons (1985) with regard to the themes of the Western journalistic observer of the Oriental Other, and the fascination-repulsion that inspires the Occidental spatial imaginary of Calcutta. By comparing and contrasting these two popular novels, both describing white men's journey into the space of the Other, the chapter seeks to achieve a two-fold objective: (a) to provide insight into the authors with respect to alterity (otherness), and (b) to examine the discursive practices of these novels in terms of contrasting spatial metaphors of Calcutta as "The City of Dreadful Night" or "The City of Joy." The chapter further argues that these spatial metaphors are redolent of what Peter Stallybrass and Allon White (1986) refer to as the "phobic enchantment" (p. 124) of the Occidental social imaginary for the poverty, squalor and the horror of the Third World.
Thesis Undergraduate
African-American\'s Ethnic or Cultural Background Affects Ethical Convictions
For most African-Americans, their history of slavery and discrimination has had the most profound, shaping effect upon their ethical convictions than any other historical experience.
Research Paper Doctorate
Gender as Performance in Sister Carrie and The House of Mirth
Theodore Dreiser's 1900 novel Sister Carrie is in style and tone in many ways radically different from Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth, published just five years later. And yet there is in both works a similar core,…
Research Paper Doctorate
History and political science: key concepts and relationships
Should the United States Normalize Relations with Cuba?
Paper Undergraduate
Race, Myth, and Capitol Sculpture: Pocahontas and Smith
Antonio Capellano's sculpture The Preservation of Captain Smith by Pocahontas (1825) is still in the Capitol Rotunda along with other works of the same period such as William Penn's Treaty with the Indians and The Landing of the Pilgrims, although they no longer resonate with audiences in the same way as they did in the 19th Century. In the 20th and 21st Centuries, more sophisticated and educated viewers at least would realize that these are all the product of an era of Western expansion and a highly romanticized view of history that is heavily tinged with racism and white nationalism.
Paper High School
Cultural Anthropology Marriage and Incest Taboos
Marriage is a sanctioned union between people that establishes certain rights and obligations between those people, their children, and their relatives (Ember & Ember, 2010). These rights and obligations may include…
Research Paper Doctorate
International marketing strategies and applications
The Future Automotive Market Analysis in Europe and North America
Research Paper Doctorate
Cultural Variables in Career Counseling for Minority Students
Good career counseling always takes place within a cultural context, which is true regardless of ethnicity. Current theoretical models may not be adequate to explain the career behavior of racial and ethnic minorities.