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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
Possessed: film analysis and themes
Possessed (1947) by Curtis Bernhardt: A Psychological Drama and a 'Woman's Film' with Film Noir Elements
Research Paper Doctorate
Slaughterhouse Five in Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt
In Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut vividly recalls living through the 1945 firebombing of Dresden during World War II. Much like the novel's hero Billy Pilgrim, Vonnegut was caught in the firestorm that consumed the…
Essay Doctorate
Extension Products Under a Brand Name Dilutes
¶ … extension products under a brand name dilutes not only the identity of the brand itself, but also of the flagship product of the brand. To determine whether flagship products are diluted by the introduction of an…
Paper Undergraduate
Album Review Ac/Dc\'s New Album,
AC/DC's new album, Black Ice, fits neatly into the rock'n'roll of the bands previous output. The album faithfully observes the genre's conventions - hard riffs, songs about partying and a little bit of sexual innuendo…
Paper Doctorate
World literature: major works and traditions
In Jonathan Swift's essay, "A Modest Proposal", the author proposes that the poor in a humorous bent that the poor should eat tor sell heir own starving children to the rich during a the great potato famine in Ireland. Obviously, the key factor in Jonathon Swift's essay is that the reader must recognize that he is not literally suggesting the poor to cannibalize. Rather, he is acknowledging the fact of the scarcity of food and therefor empathizes with the struggling and famished souls in the country of Ireland. Jonathon Swift goes to very great lengths to support his argument his argument and to maintain the satire, including the a list of possible preparation styles for the children and the calculations showing the financial benefits of his suggestion. This essay is widely held to be one of the greatest examples of sustained irony in the history of the English language. The entirety of "A Modest Proposal" is satirical because it makes fun of other grand ideas that people have proposed to solve big problems in society. The proposal itself (that the Irish should eat their babies) is satirical because it makes fun of people who propose absurd things thinking that they are practical. Jonathon Swift's reference to boys and girls as not a "saleable commodity" is a good particularly good example because it goes on to suggest the cold thinking of people who go on to argue for turning everything into the questions of economics.
Paper Undergraduate
Formal analysis concepts and methods
¶ … difficult to write in prose about certain aspects of art and music. The emotions that one feels based on the experience of art often do not translate into prose, yet it is important to be able to share one's…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Why music is my favorite subject
From "What a Girl Wants" to "Candyman," Christina Aguilera has proven herself to be bigger than a bubblegum diva. Her hit songs show that Christina has a remarkable versatility. The half-Ecuadorian, half-Irish singer is…
Essay Doctorate
Diverse Nature of Psychology the Human Mind
Modern psychology is heavily influenced by the extreme diversity found within its core concepts. There are a vast number of major concepts and sub examples that differ enormously from one another and take their influence from other genres of study and the various findings of specific empirical research conclusions. Officially, there are four core "specialties," including clinical, counseling, school, and industrial/ organizational psychology, although even these general topics are further diversified into more specific areas that highlight different findings and assumptions about man's position within modern society (Landrum 2010 p 13).
Research Paper Doctorate
Products and services in business operations
This is a paper that outlines a business plan for setting up an internet cafe, describing the industrial trend of the products and services available for the cafe. It uses 5 sources in MLA format.
Essay Doctorate
Jackson Pollock's Abstract Expressionism: Style and Significance
briefing " Should U.S. support European unification? "Dwight D. Elsenhower 1957