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Halloween
Essays

73+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

73 papers
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About This Topic AI GENERATED

Halloween is a holiday with deep historical and cultural roots, making it a subject of genuine academic interest across disciplines such as cultural studies, religious studies, history, and literature. Students write about it to explore how modern celebrations connect to older traditions surrounding death, the afterlife, and seasonal ritual. The topic invites analysis of how different cultures mark the boundary between the living and the dead, and how popular practice evolves over time. Related observances, particularly the Day of the Dead, frequently appear alongside Halloween as points of comparison, giving essays a natural cross-cultural dimension.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some examine Halloween's origins and trace how the holiday developed into its current form, while others focus on cultural comparison, setting Halloween against the Day of the Dead to highlight differences in how societies understand death and commemorate the deceased. Literary and film analysis also appears, with works like Dracula, The Exorcist, and The Amityville Horror used to explore horror as a genre connected to themes of mortality and fear. Additional papers address practical dimensions such as food choices and healthy holiday snacks for young children, reflecting how Halloween intersects with everyday life and consumer behavior.

A strong essay on Halloween benefits from a focused thesis that commits to one angle — historical, comparative, or cultural — rather than trying to cover everything at once. Evidence drawn from specific traditions, texts, or documented practices carries more weight than general assertions about what the holiday "means." A common pitfall is treating Halloween as a purely modern, commercial event without acknowledging the layered historical and cross-cultural context that gives the subject its academic depth.

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Thesis Undergraduate
Benchmarking resource allocation and performance metrics
As the nation's largest healthcare provider, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has the responsibility to use taxpayer resources to their maximum advantage in accomplishing its longstanding mandate to "care for him who shall have borne the battle, his widow and orphan" (Doebbeling et al., 2002). To help it accomplish this important mission, the VA has long used benchmarking to identify opportunities for improving the provision of healthcare services in its medical centers, outpatient clinics and Vet Centers across the country. As a result of these initiatives, the staff at some VA medical centers used other benchmarking techniques to identify further opportunities to improve patient care and satisfaction, with one such example being a "Tell It to the Director" program at the VA Medical Center in Oklahoma City. This paper provides a review of the relevant literature to assess the results of this program over time, followed by a summary of the research in the conclusion.
Paper Undergraduate
Community health nursing principles and practice
The community of Lansdowne is one of the fastest growing boroughs in the Delaware County in the larger Pennsylvania state. The development of the railroad during the beginning of 20th century enhanced growth of its economy. Besides, the area is a destination to domestic tourists who traverse the region by rail and horses to watch the striking landscape. The demographics, cultural and disaster assessment, epidemiology, and interpretation of health indicators of the community using a genogram, are the fundamental areas the paper seeks to focus.
Research Paper Doctorate
Life of the Medieval Janet
Early in the morning I woke to the sound of the servants sweeping the stone steps beneath the narrow windows of my bedroom. My father's castle is cold and damp, although we hang tapestries from the rafters to keep the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
American horror in film and television
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is considered by many as being a groundbreaking film in the genre of American horror, being considered by some as one of the most influential films in the industry.
Paper Undergraduate
Workplace Creativity: A Halloween Decoration Team Project
I experienced the power of creativity one year at work. It was Halloween and every year, each department competed for best Halloween decoration. It was fierce competition and our fearless leader (boss) was also very…
Research Paper Doctorate
Saying, \"As American as Apple
¶ … saying, "As American as apple pie." This day and age, you could easily say "As American as Kraft Dinner and Philadelphia Cream Cheese." If you ever live overseas, bring plenty of boxes of Kraft Dinner with you.
Essay Masters
Criminal event characteristics and analysis
Social Control and the Life-Course Perspective
Essay Doctorate
Attending a Jehovah's Witnesses Kingdom Hall Service
This is a reflection paper based on an encounter and visitation with Jehovah's Witnesses. The experience was positive and enlightening and this four page paper walks readers through the experience and explores some of the stigmas associated with this fundamentalist Christian group. It includes a review of the service and a brief discussion with a devout Witness.
Research Paper Doctorate
Entertainment economy and its market impacts
Michael J. Wolf's book, The Entertainment Economy: How Mega-Media Forces are Transforming Our Lives, was published six years ago but nevertheless offers timely insights into how the forces of American corporate…
Thesis Doctorate
Eating Behaviors in College Freshmen
The transition from high school to undergraduate life is perhaps of the most challenging experiences from adolescence into early adulthood. One of the common side effects of this transition is weight gain that occurs during the first or freshman year of college. The paper will discuss how behaviors related to eating habits and alcohol consumption contributes to the general weight gain of first year undergraduates. Among college students, this weight gain is fairly typical and is known as "the freshman 15," referring to the average amount of pounds undergraduates gain over the course of freshman year—fifteen pounds.