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Genre
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Genre is a foundational concept in the arts, referring to the categories and conventions that organize creative works — whether in literature, film, visual art, or performance. Students encounter genre across disciplines including literary studies, film studies, art history, and cultural criticism. What makes it academically interesting is the tension between genre as a stable set of rules and genre as a living, evolving form shaped by audience expectations, social context, and artistic innovation. The works and movements appearing in this body of student writing — from Rococo and Neoclassical painting to lowbrow art, from dime novels to Western film, from short fiction to hip-hop and street dance — reflect just how broadly genre operates across the arts.

The papers here approach genre from several distinct angles. Some take a comparative approach, placing two works or styles side by side to examine how each handles form and convention, as seen in analyses pairing short stories or contrasting artistic movements. Others focus on a single genre — the Western film, the crime novel, the short story — tracing its defining characteristics and cultural role. Case-study analysis is also common, with writers using a specific work or artist to illuminate broader genre questions. A few papers address how genre intersects with social change, looking at how shifting audiences and cultural moments reshape artistic categories.

A strong essay on genre establishes a clear, arguable thesis about what a genre does, not just what it is. Evidence drawn from close reading of specific texts, films, or artworks carries the most weight. One common pitfall is treating genre as a fixed checklist rather than a dynamic framework — strong essays acknowledge that the most interesting works often push against or redefine the conventions they inherit.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Dyskolos the Play\'s Genre Plays
Plays written after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C. were generally termed as the New Comedy. Menander's Dyskolos, having been written and played in 317-316 B.C. may therefore belong to the New Comedy genre.
Research Paper Doctorate
Heritage British Cinema and Thatcherism
The book, "British Cinema in the 1980's" by John Hill, has given detailed accounts of both heritage as well as Empire films, but however, happens to convey the mistaken message that filming the past is all completely an…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Portrait of a Killer: Jack
Whenever the genre of horror is mentioned the name of Jack the Ripper comes to mind. Regarded as one of the most notorious serial slashers, many writers have used him in different works.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Leopold and Loeb the Murder
The murder of fourteen-year-old Bobby Franks and the subsequent arrest and trial of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb were heavy on the minds of the public in 1924, as the sensationalism of this extreme case were evident…
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare's Hamlet in Modern Society: Almereyda's Film
The tragedies of Shakespeare are the encyclopedia of humanity's life. Through the traits of his characters the famous author shows the virtues and evils of common men depicting the feelings of love, hatred, envy,…
Paper Undergraduate
Godot? Samuel Beckett\'s Play \"Waiting
Samuel Beckett's play "Waiting for Godot," one of the illustrious pieces of writing in the category theatre of the absurd, presents the audience with elements characteristic of this genre: characters bearing names…
Research Paper Doctorate
Bush\'s Brain: How Karl Rove
Bush's Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential
Paper Undergraduate
Dracula by Bram Stoker Dracula
The Gothic elements in Dracula by Bram Stoker are intensified by the realism that is created in the writing technique. By using the device of diary writing the author intensifies the actuality of the horror, which makes…
Essay Doctorate
Sarah Orne Jewett and Charles Chesnutt: local color fiction in nineteenth century America
This paper discusses in regard to American Literature. The essay is divided in two parts: the former is focused on concepts like local color by relating to Sarah Orne Jewett and Charles Chesnutt while the later speaks about modernism and Robert Frost's attempts to introduce the genre in three of his poems.
Paper Undergraduate
Westernization and European Art Music in the Ottoman Empire
How did the Westernization of the Ottoman Empire Begin?