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Futility
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About This Topic AI GENERATED

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
The Easter Rising of 1916 and Irish American involvement
American influence on events in Ireland have always been strong, just as the Irish influence on political and social events in the United States. Unlike many immigrant groups, the Irish immigrants were more likely to…
Paper Undergraduate
Analysis of two museum artworks
Botticelli's Madonna and Child with an Angel
Paper Undergraduate
Managing Futility in Oncology Settings;
Ideally, doctors and nurses work as a team to try to achieve a similar, overall goal: Contribute treatment to foster improvement in patients' health. In consideration of contemporary concerns in this area, this proposed…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Kant's theory applied to a decision in Middlemarch chapter 48
Immanuel Kant's metaphysics of morals established a close connection between the reasoning faculty which is proper only to human beings and the ability to act morally. Kant based his ethical theory on a famous concept…
Paper Masters
US military involvement in the Korean Conflict
The Korean Conflict Introduction How did the Korean conflict begin? What were the dynamics behind this war? How and why did the United States get involved? How was the Korean conflict linked to the Cold War? These and other issues will be addressed in this paper. Thesis: The Korean conflict was indeed the first battle of the Cold War, and the United States, although it was thoroughly unprepared when it went into battle, came out a winner even though the end was a virtual standoff. Background on how the U.S. become involved in the Korean conflict In the book, Truman and Korea: The Political Culture of the Early Cold War, author and professor Paul G. Pierpaoli Jr. explains that after World War II the Soviet Union emerged in a "new and more powerful stance," a direct challenge to America and its "…fragile allies" (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 17). And notwithstanding the fact that the Cold War really began to take hold in 1947 and 1948 President Truman – known as a "legendary fiscal conservative" – was very reluctant to increase the amount of money spent on the military after WW II (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 18).
Paper Undergraduate
The nude: a critical history
In the Renaissance painter Titian's original depiction of Venus and Adonis, the nude Venus sits, clinging to her lover Adonis, as she tries to restrain him from going to hunt wild boar.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Jihad and the Quran
According to traditional Muslim religious beliefs, the Quran is the written transcript of the word of God, as revealed through direct communication to the last of the pre-Islamic Arabian Prophets, Muhammad.
Paper Undergraduate
Stephen Crane: life, works, and literary significance
Once upon a time: The fable of Crane's 'naturalistic' "The Open Boat" and the life lesson of the Blue Hotel
Research Paper Undergraduate
War on Drugs/Traffic Ever Since
Ever since President Richard Nixon uttered the phrase "war on drugs," the world has been embroiled in one of the most ridiculous and costly campaigns of the past century. A war on drugs is, as Robert Wakefield states in…
Paper Undergraduate
Spanish Irish relations in the sixteenth century
Introduction - Overview To give some historical perspective to the battle / siege at Kinsale in 1601, it should be pointed out that the English pretty well controlled Ireland at that time. Author Paul State explains that Queen Elizabeth had attempted to put a stranglehold on Ireland going back ten years. Indeed by the 1590s, England had succeeded in "subduing Ireland, with one outstanding exception," and that was the heartland – the province of Ulster (State, 2009, p. 104). Ulster remained Gaelic in its culture and government, and the most powerful families in Ulster were the O'Neill family and the O'Donnell family, allies to be sure and in the eyes of the English they were a huge threat. Queen Elizabeth worried about the Ulster "lords" (i.e., O'Neill and O'Donnell) breaching English security in the rest of the country. On page 105 State explains that by 1595 Hugh O'Neill had rallied other rebel forces from around Ireland, believing that "…in the end, only by expelling the English from the entire island could he make his title secure." Hence, attacking the English with "musketmen, cavalrymen, and pikemen in imitation of the English," along with "gallowglasses from Scotland" (gallowglasses were mercenary warriors), O'Neill ambushed and harassed the columns of English soldiers (State, 105).