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Fake
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The concept of "fake" appears across an unusually wide range of academic disciplines, from literary studies and cultural criticism to psychology, law, and media analysis. What makes it intellectually compelling is its relationship to truth, authenticity, and perception — questions that surface in courses on ethics, communications, consumer behavior, and the humanities alike. The tension between appearance and reality, between constructed identity and genuine experience, gives the topic persistent relevance whether students are examining fictional characters, public figures, media institutions, or consumer markets.

The papers archived here reflect that breadth. Some take a literary approach, analyzing how characters in narrative fiction perform or conceal identity, while others examine celebrity culture and the manufactured personas it produces. Media-focused essays look at how television news constructs credibility and selects stories, raising questions about what audiences accept as authentic. Psychological angles appear in work on personality theory, and legal or forensic frameworks surface in case-study papers where establishing truth versus fabrication is central to the argument. Consumer behavior research adds another dimension, exploring how trust and skepticism shape purchasing decisions.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a precise, arguable claim about what "fake" means within a specific context rather than treating it as self-evident. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, documented case studies, or established theoretical frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating fakeness with simple dishonesty — a nuanced essay distinguishes between deliberate deception, social performance, and constructed narrative, showing how faith in appearances operates differently across contexts.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Death of a Salesman: Tragedy in Prose
Tragedy, can easily lure us into talking nonsense."
Paper Doctorate
Film theory: key concepts and applications
Laura Mulvey's piece, "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" is divided into three sections. The first section is the introduction, the next section is called "Pleasure in Looking: Fascination with the Human Form." The third section is called "Woman as Image, Man as Bearer of the Look," which is followed by a summary of the entire work. Mulvey makes numerous assertions in her work, but one of her primary intentions of "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" is to call serious, critical attention to the act of looking as part of the cinematic experience. She calls attention to three fundamental types of looking: the looking of the camera at the frame as it records the footage, the looking of the audience upon the screen, and the looking of the characters between and among each other within the frame. Mulvey proceeds to elaborate upon each time of looking and how the look functions as part of the cinematic experience as well as the connection between the types of looking within narrative cinema and the duplication of experienced gender stratifications in reality between men and women.
Essay Undergraduate
Branding and communication strategies in organizational contexts
There has been significant criticism leveled against the branding practices of companies, and most particularly those of multinationals, which have been raised. Drawing on the academic literature this work will identify the primary arguments used in these critiques and will critically examine those arguments and discuss their implications for branding in the age of globalization. This study will further answer the question of how branding has changed under the influence of such criticism and how.
Research Paper Doctorate
Drug education programs and effectiveness
The DARE program, whose short form is derived from "Drug Abuse Resistance Education," has developed so quickly, from the time since its commencement 18 years ago, that it is at the present being educated in 75% of…
Paper Doctorate
Long Day\'s Journey Into Night by Eugene O\'Neill
It is an irony of Eugene O'Neill's career that his large-scale expressionist dramas of the 1920s and 1930s -- which earned Pulitzers for works like Strange Interlude and ultimately the Nobel Prize in Literature for…
Research Paper Doctorate
Rawls's Theory of Justice: Fairness, Rights, and Political Liberalism
Concluding in Political moderation, in "A Theory of Justice," and in later works, John Rawls explains a comprehensive, as well as influential theory, which is on the subject of, presenting a theory of justice in…
Paper Doctorate
Freedom and Terrorism Online
The independence of posting video content to the YouTube forum leaves it significantly easy for the terrorists to post videos and promote psychological warfare. YouTube provides a massive online medium for terrorists to increase their appeal in target demographics (Denning, 2009; Weimann, 2009). Al-Faloja is a password protected terrorist online platform used by terrorists to increase the use of YouTube
Essay Doctorate
Cost analysis of biometric control device implementation and error types
There are some questions that will help determine the cost benefit analysis of a new biometric system (Cooper). The level of security, the level of reliability, need of backup, the acceptable time for enrollment, level…
Research Paper Doctorate
Idea of Artificiality in Hollywood Fiction and in Los Angeles
¶ … performance of the Hollywood film industry, keeping in view all the relevant details and structures, which the directors and the moviemakers of the Hollywood film industry present in their movies.
Paper Undergraduate
False Beliefs and Their Behavioral Consequences
: The method of this study was not erroneous and was based on research design that was valid and repeatable. For instance, the 24-item food-history inventory that was administered to participants was also used in previous empirical research study conducted on the same subject by Bernstein, et al (2005). In that study, the researchers also investigated the implications of false beliefs using same 24-item food history inventory. In fact, this study conducted by Geraerts, et al. (2008) replicated the materials and procedures of an earlier study conducted by Bernstein, et al (2005).