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Futility
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Futility as an academic topic explores the condition in which human effort, resistance, or desire produces no meaningful change — a theme that surfaces across literature, history, medicine, ethics, and social studies. It appears in courses examining existential questions about power, agency, and mortality, as well as in more applied fields where the limits of action have real consequences. The concept is academically interesting precisely because it sits at the intersection of philosophy and lived experience, forcing writers to examine why people persist in the face of inevitable failure and what that persistence reveals about the human mind and social structures.

Student papers on this topic approach futility from strikingly varied angles. Literary analyses examine how works like Lu Xun's "A Madman's Diary" and Edith Wharton's "Ethan Frome" use character and narrative to expose cycles of powerlessness. Historical and political essays draw on events like the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement to assess when collective action succeeds and when institutional forces render it ineffective. Other papers take an ethical or clinical turn, addressing topics such as Do Not Resuscitate orders and chronic care, where the boundary between treatment and futile intervention carries serious legal and moral weight.

A strong essay on futility requires a precise, arguable thesis that identifies whose actions are futile, within what system, and why that matters. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, historical records, or ethical case studies tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating futility as a simple conclusion rather than a condition worth interrogating — the best papers ask what futility reveals about power, knowledge, and the choices people make when outcomes are already constrained.

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Paper Undergraduate
Fractured Worlds Over the Last
Over the last five hundred years, Western philosophy has been the main focus of international relations. As, there was an emphasis on a number of different areas to include: human rights, respect for the rule of law and…
Paper Doctorate
Religious experience of the prophet Ezekiel
The prophetic career of Ezekiel began in an environment of exile -- exile from the normal forms of priestly ordination and service, from the rhythms of worship in the Temple, from the larger community of the promised…
Essay Doctorate
Negotiation of position and resistance within total institutions
The presence of total institutions within our overall societal structure provides a unique opportunity for anthropologic inquiry through the standardization of individual behaviors.
Paper Undergraduate
Self awareness, emotional intelligence, and personal development factors
DECEPTION in INVESTIGATION, INTERROGATION, and TESTIMONY
Research Paper Undergraduate
James Bradley\'s Epic Non-Fiction Book
James Bradley's epic non-fiction book "Flyboys: A True Story of Courage" has become a national best seller, and now a Hollywood movie. The premise of the book is a detailed account of a World War II incident over the…
Paper Undergraduate
Sophocles: Oedipus the King Fate,
Fate, Free Will, and Pride in Oedipus the King
Research Paper Undergraduate
World War I: causes, course, and consequences
Journal Exercise 6.1A: Impressions of War
Paper Doctorate
Why The Waste Land and The French Lieutenant's Woman exemplify modernism and postmodernism
This paper discusses the Wasteland as an exemplary text of the Modernist Period and the French Lieutenant's Woman as an exemplary test of the Post-Modernist period. It posits that Modernism and Post-Modernism cannot be understood by reference to common features alone, but also as responses to their respective social, cultural, and political contexts. It concludes that both works became exemplary partly because they were so unlike any literature before them. Although unconventional, each was familiar enough to be contextualized in the course of literary history, meaning they unique in a way that could be articulated with the terminology available to literary critics of their time.
Paper Undergraduate
Timberlake Feminist Drama: Two Plays
Theatrical performance, beginning in the nineteenth century and continuing through the twentieth and into our current era, has been at the forefront of social and political change. This has been arguably true of the art…
Paper Undergraduate
Native Americans: history, culture, and contemporary issues
A Counterpoint to the Traditional Telling of the Shawnee People