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Film
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Film is one of the most versatile subjects in the arts and humanities, appearing in courses ranging from media studies and communication to sociology, psychology, and cultural criticism. What makes it academically compelling is its dual nature: film functions simultaneously as an art form with distinct technical and aesthetic conventions and as a cultural artifact that reflects the values, tensions, and relationships of the society that produces it. Students are asked to analyze specific works such as Mean Girls, Tough Guise, Sarafina, Wit, Menace II Society, and True Grit precisely because these films open up larger conversations about identity, violence, gender, race, and human behavior.

The papers archived here approach film from several directions. Some focus on technical and production elements, examining terminology, cinematography, and the conventions of silent film. Others take a sociological or psychological angle, using specific movies to explore addiction, domestic violence, and human behavior. Comparative essays place films side by side to highlight contrasting storytelling choices, while genre analysis papers examine why a film like The Hangover operates as comedy. Reflective and reaction-based writing also appears frequently, asking students to connect a film's scenes and story to real-world experience.

A strong film essay anchors its argument in specific scenes, dialogue, or cinematic techniques rather than plot summary. A well-scoped thesis makes a clear interpretive claim about what a film communicates and how it achieves that effect. Evidence drawn from the viewer's experience of particular moments carries more weight than general impressions. The most common pitfall is treating a film purely as a story to retell rather than as a constructed text where every choice — sound, framing, character relationship — contributes to meaning.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Emile Zola and the Movies the Translation
The translation of any work of literature into another medium, even one apparently so closely aligned with the written word as film, is always a chancy proposition. While literature and film focus themselves on the same…
Research Paper Doctorate
Film studies and analysis
Mississippi Masala, "Do the Right Thing" and "Scarface."
Research Paper Doctorate
Book Rush to Judgment by Mark Lane
¶ … alarm clock will break and so you'll oversleep. When you do wake up, you will burn your lips, tongue and liver on your coffee. Your car will refuse to start, and when it does you will discover that one of your tires…
Paper Undergraduate
Taxi Driver: A Case Study Travis Bickle:
This paper examines the pathology and personality disorder of the character Travis Bickle in the iconic film Taxi Driver by Martin Scorcese. The paper looks at the symptoms that Bickle manifests and how he sinks lower and lower into his own disorder. The climax of the film demonstrates him manifesting his own heightened derangement.
Paper Masters
Night (1964) Is a Rock Mockumentary Intended
¶ … Night (1964) is a rock mockumentary intended to exploit the Beatles and Beatlemania during the band's meteoric rise. The film attempts to capture the Beatles as they struggle to deal with their sudden success and…
Paper Doctorate
The legal system in China
The current state of the Chinese legal system is in flux. To instate a system similar to that in the United States or Western Europe means undoing thousands of years of cultural norms.
Paper Undergraduate
Director of the Boy in the Striped
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne
Paper Undergraduate
Day of the Locust
Nathanial West's novel The Day of the Locust is a dark story about Hollywood and its corrupting influences. Tod Hackett, the protagonist is a set designer recruited out of Yale to work for a West Coast film studio.
Paper Doctorate
Documentary films: history, impact, and cultural significance
Ken Burns' Documentary: The National Parks – America's Best Idea Introduction The reputation Ken Burns has acquired over the years is a glowing, highly lauded reputation, and for good reason. His use of history, video and well-written narrative has won awards and has entertained and informed all those who have come into contact with his documentaries. The documentary to be critiqued and reviewed in this paper is The National Parks – America's Best Idea. How Yosemite Got its Name The first segment of The National Parks focuses on the very popular national park, Yosemite, in California. Burns starts off by pointing to a group of "armed white men" called the Mariposa Battalion. It was in the middle of the California gold rush in 1851 and they were riding through California searching for Native Americans they could drive from their homeland. On March 27 of that year these men found what would later be called Yosemite. Tall granite peaks and waterfalls that were spectacular made a big impression on them. The water from the falls fell "thousands of feet" to the valley floor.
Paper Doctorate
Transmedia characters and storytelling across multiple platforms
¶ … James Bond's penis" author Toby Miller writes that after the 1960s: "masculinity is no longer the exclusive prominence of men, either as spectators, consumers or agents of power.