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Famous
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The concept of fame touches nearly every academic discipline, from history and political science to literature, cultural studies, and media analysis. Students write about famous subjects — whether individuals, institutions, brands, or cultural phenomena — to examine how power, influence, and public perception shape human experience. Fame serves as a lens for understanding larger forces: how ideas spread, how figures like Lord Byron or leaders behind events such as the Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela come to represent entire movements, and how cultural products from Japanese ramen to competing brands like Coke and Pepsi acquire iconic status. Across disciplines, fame raises genuine questions about who earns recognition, why, and with what consequences.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are biographical or historical, tracing the life and significance of a figure or event, as with analyses of Steven Spielberg's films or World War I's Lost Battalion. Others are comparative, weighing two subjects against each other — competing franchises, contrasting philosophies like those of Kant and Nietzsche, or rival brands. Cultural analysis appears frequently as well, examining how fame functions within a specific community or tradition, such as the role of popular culture in Japanese society. Case studies of singular institutions, like Churchill Downs Race Track, ground broader arguments in concrete detail.

A strong essay on a famous subject goes beyond surface-level description by building a clear, arguable thesis about what the subject's fame reveals — about culture, power, family, or values. Evidence drawn from historical record, textual analysis, or documented cultural practice carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating fame itself as self-explanatory; the essay should always explain why recognition matters, not simply assume it does.

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Research Paper Masters
Use of Crime and Punishment
This paper discusses three short stories, "A Good Man is Hard to Find," "The Story of a Scar," and "Sonny's Blues." In each, a crime has been committed and the perpetrator goes more or less punished. However, it becomes apparent that there are secondary crimes in each story which reveal a hidden culprit and a secondary criminal which has more meaning than the original.
Paper Undergraduate
Satan Has Many Names in Literature
This story is meant to be a comparison and contrast between to books, written by different authors, who have something in common in the tales they have told. The paper looks at "Faust" by Goethe and "The Mysterious Stranger" by Mark Twain. The two authors tell classic tales of Satan and they have some very different views about him and his influence.
Paper Masters
Computer Forensics Digital Evidence
Technology has changed the world. Part of this change has been the increased use of the Internet, of Smart Phones, Computers and Tablets, or other electronic devices. Just as society changes because of this, so does criminal activity. Thus, law enforcement must be able to use new techniques to fight crime, as well as preserve and analyze evidence. This paper is a basic review of the use of digital evidence in the modern world.
Research Paper Doctorate
Circassian People a Brief History
The Circassians, comprising some 3,000 people concentrated in two northern villages, are Sunni Muslims, although they share neither the Arab origin nor the cultural background of the larger Islamic community.
Thesis Masters
Renaissance Art Patrons and Their Effect on History
The great works of art that hang on the walls of some of the great museums of the world are not there because the artist wished for the world to behold their particular brilliance. It is true that greats such as…
Paper Doctorate
Telecommuting Technology Has Reached Into the Lives
Technology has reached into the lives of each of us. Regardless of how we might try to avoid modern technology it affects cannot be denied. Cell phones, email, internet, GPS are just a few of the modern technological…
Paper Doctorate
The female protagonist in The Blue Beard and fairy tale heroine representations
The story of Bluebeard is a famous one, although not as often retold as some of the happier stories like "Cinderella" or "Sleeping Beauty." One of the reasons for this is that the story of "Bluebird" does not end…
Paper Masters
Affordable Housing in Los Angeles
Los Angeles is called the "city of Angels." It is a heavily populated state of California and second most populous in the United States. Los Angeles is very famous for its climate, sunshine throughout the year.
Paper Doctorate
Niagara Falls as a favorite destination: attractions and entertainment
When most people hear the name Niagara Falls, they often think about the waterfalls which are between the United States and Canada, but it is actually the famous falls as well as the community that surrounds them.
Essay Doctorate
Democracy / Liberty Is Direct Democracy Desirable
Is direct democracy desirable and/or possible today? The question is addressed first theoretically, with reference to Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws, which actually categorizes direct democracy as one of the corruptions into which a democratic system can descend, by an insistence on too much egalitarianism. Direct democracy is considered as an ideal, which is desirable insofar as it offers a critique of contemporary politics, but whose possibility is limited by whether or not it can be feasibly implemented. Two contemporary case studies are brought in to examine the question further: the experiment with internet-organized direct democracy in Estonia, and the experiment with social-media-inspired direct democracy in the Occupy Wall Street movement. Paper then offers an answer to a second essay question about conceptions of freedom in contemporary liberal democracy.