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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
Comparing literary genres and their characteristics
Literature is a means by which people can raise questions about the society they live in and address issues of concern to them. One of the questioned often raised relates to the role of women in society.
Essay Doctorate
Women Rights to Health
Though they differ radically in their emphases, both articles in this assignment delve into salient women's issues, and focus on data relating to women's health, maternal mortality, and why women and men differ so…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Killing Stanley Kubrick Was One
Stanley Kubrick was one of the most disputed film directors. He always tried to shock the audience through image and dialog. "The Killing" is made in his twenties, but Kubrick proved to be very self assured and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Reeve and Landor Writers Who
Writers who place their tales in exotic locations may have visited those locations or they may be imagining them on the basis of an image they have of the site. They may also derive what they believe about distant…
Research Paper Doctorate
Individual Learning Plans for ESOL Learners in Community Education
The Question of Individual Learning Plans for ESOL Learners
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare's Hamlet
When the Renaissance brought about a rebirth of many of the philosophies and customs of antiquity, it resurrected the ancient stoical idea that by mediation upon death one might be able to come to terms with it and pass…
Paper Masters
Henry James's The turn of the screw: analysis and themes
In speaking of ghost stories, one may say that while there's something rotten in the state of Denmark, there's something really rotten in the House of Bly. That is to say, The Turn of the Screw by Henry James is chock-full with moral depravity and psychological terror, so much so that it gives even the greatest ghost story of all time a run for its money. But what makes The Turn of the Screw such a tour de force is not the fact that like Shakespeare's rendering of Denmark in Hamlet, the House of Bly is "an unweeded garden" of "things rank and gross in nature," but that unlike Hamlet the source for that moral depravity and psychological terror is a complete mystery (Shakespeare). It is the purpose of this essay to examine who is to blame for all the misery and terror in The Turn of the Screw.
Paper Masters
Humanity One Very Interesting Aspect
One very interesting aspect of the human experience is the manner in which certain themes appear again and again over time, in literature, religion, mythology, and culture – regardless of the geographic location, the economic status, and the time period. Perhaps it is the innate human need to explain and explore the known and unknown, but to have disparate cultures in time and location find ways of explaining certain principles in such similar manner leads one to believe that there is perhaps more to myth and ritual than simple repetition of archetypal themes. In a sense, then, to acculturize the future, we must re-craft the past, and the way that seems to happen is in the synergism of myth and ritual as expressed in a variety of forms that examine humanity.
Paper Undergraduate
Postmodernism: characteristics, themes, and cultural impact
Introduction Postmodernism is, according to the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), a reaction to the "assumed certainty of scientific, or objective efforts to explain reality." The real understanding of life, according to postmodernism, is what one's mind – in its own personal reality – tries to figure out and decipher about life. Moreover, postmodernism is very suspicious of explanations that "claim to be valid for all groups, cultures, traditions, or races" and instead it focuses on the truth each individual discovers (PBS). Additionally, it is important to note that postmodernism relies on "concrete experience over abstract principles," and the postmodernist person knows the outcomes of life's experiences will likely and necessarily be "fallible and relative, rather than certain and universal" (PBS).
Research Paper Doctorate
Sketches of Jewish Social Life,
Sketches of Jewish Social Life, Alfred Edersheim attempts to transport the reader into the land of Palestine during the time of Jesus and his apostles. He does so in an effort to give readers a sense of the historical…