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Hair
Essays

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About This Topic AI GENERATED

Hair is a subject that surfaces across a surprisingly wide range of academic disciplines, from biology and anatomy to literature, media studies, and personal narrative writing. In science courses, it appears as a component of the integumentary system, the body's outer layer of skin, hair, and nails. In humanities and composition classes, hair carries cultural and symbolic weight, touching on identity, gender, history, and the ways women in particular present themselves to the world. Its versatility makes it genuinely interesting academically: a single topic can bridge clinical description and deeply personal meaning depending on the course context.

The papers archived here reflect that range. Some take an analytical approach, examining advertisements and film — including work connected to F. Scott Fitzgerald's writing — to explore how hair shapes visual messaging and cultural ideals. Others are personal and descriptive, using hair as a lens for life narrative, journal reflection, or college application essays. Still others address hair in professional or applied contexts such as client health history examinations and customer service materials. Comparative and image-analysis frameworks appear alongside purely creative or expressive work.

A strong essay on hair succeeds by committing to one clear angle rather than trying to cover all of them at once. If the focus is cultural or historical, specific examples of how hair signals change, status, or identity carry the most argumentative weight. If the approach is analytical, grounding claims in a single text, image, or case keeps the thesis manageable. The most common pitfall is treating hair as merely decorative or superficial — the strongest essays recognize that it consistently points toward larger questions about identity, history, and social meaning.

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Paper High School
Debussy\'s Music Pelleas and Melisande
I found this opera to be enjoyable from the vey onset. I knew nothing of the opera and knew just a little of the story/myth from antiquity of Pelleas and Melisande. At the time of my viewing, I did have a solid…
Essay Doctorate
Complaint Box Recently, I Was Riding Behind
This paper offers an example, based upon a New York Times editorial, of how to construct a persuasive memo on the subject of a 'pet peeve.' The original New York Times editorial dealt with the problem of people grooming themselves in public locations (such as on the subway). The paper contains a draft of such a document on the subject of talking on a cell phone while driving.
Paper Doctorate
Analyzing the Narrative Film Structure and Motifs in Casablanca
An analysis of the narrative structure in 1942's Casablanca. Additionally, the motif of "As Time Goes By" is analyzed. The song is used to demonstrate the relationship between Ilsa and Rick. Additionally, the song serves as a unifying device throughout the film and is used to explicate the relationship that Rick and Ilsa had before he moved to Casablanca.
Paper Doctorate
Life Review and Coping With Mortality: Kübler-Ross and Beyond
This paper addresses the issue of mortality, the life review process and the DABDA theory of psychological changes in the face of impending death. For most of us, a sense of impending mortality prompts a need to find closure, conduct a full life review and reconciliation. The reality that death is a natural process—leading towards an inescapable final destination—seems implausible at first glance. Coming to terms with impending mortality is challenging and calls forth a range of deep emotions that need to be expressed. Expressing these intense feelings and reviewing one's life are essential steps in finding peace on an emotional and spiritual level.
Essay Undergraduate
Where Are You Going, Where Have You
"Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" by Joyce Carol Oates depicts the rape and possible murder of a young girl who has been innocently yet provocatively displaying her sexuality. This paper analyzes the story from a literary and a psychological perspective to show how more effective communication strategies between Connie and her parents could have prevented the tragedy.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Race, Identity, and Assumption in Chopin's "Désirée's Baby"
An analysis of Kate Chopin's 1892 short story "Desiree's Baby." In the paper, issues of perception, assumption, and identity are explored to determine how Desiree, whose background and biological family are unknown, and Armand, who wrongly assumes he knows his family background and thinks he is 100% white when in fact his mother was black, are influenced and destroyed by these concepts.
Thesis Undergraduate
US Supreme Court and the Rights of Inmates
The objective of this study is to identify the constitutional amendments that deal directly with the rights of correctional inmates. For each amendment, this work will describe the rights of inmates and correctional…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Elder interview methods and insights
Identify one communication barrier: The participant indicated that she has suffered two strokes in recent years. Although her speech is clear, she did indicate that at times she has difficulty remembering and that I may…
Paper Undergraduate
Summary and overview of key concepts
This is a four page paper. The first two pages are about Vladimir Nabokov's autobiography "Speak, Memory" and discusses only the first three chapters. The autobiography is untraditional. Nabokov begins with very metaphysical and mystical terminologies about time and darkness before discussing the details of his life. Charles Simic does something similar in his poem about his mother, which is the second part of this essay.
Essay Doctorate
Religion, literature, and the problem of evil in Nabokov's Lolita
Vladimir Nobokov's book titled Lolita, is a story of a pedophilic romance between a girl and an older man. Famous for its eroticism and exploration of a taboo part of human sexuality, it delves into what makes a girl…