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Hypocrisy
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Hypocrisy—the gap between professed beliefs and actual behavior—surfaces as a subject of serious inquiry across ethics, political science, literature, sociology, and religious studies. It interests academics because it cuts to the heart of authenticity, moral authority, and social trust. Students encounter the topic in courses on political philosophy, where founding documents and institutions claim high ideals while contradicting them in practice, and in literary studies, where authors from Charles Dickens to Oscar Wilde to Voltaire construct characters and societies whose stated values betray their actions. The tension between justice and behavior, between what citizens are promised and what they receive, gives the topic lasting relevance.

The papers archived here approach hypocrisy from several distinct angles. Literary analyses examine how works by Dickens, Wycherley, Oscar Wilde, Zora Neale Hurston, and Flannery O'Connor use irony and characterization to expose moral contradiction. Historical and political essays interrogate figures like Thomas Jefferson and documents like the Declaration of Independence, where proclamations of freedom coexisted with slavery. Other papers take sociological or institutional approaches, scrutinizing corporate social responsibility, church leadership, racial identity in texts like Caucasia by Danzy Senna, and the treatment of women in Voltaire's Candide. Together these angles show that hypocrisy operates at personal, institutional, and national levels simultaneously.

A strong essay on hypocrisy needs a focused thesis that identifies a specific actor, text, or institution and explains the consequences of the contradiction it embodies. Evidence drawn from primary sources—speeches, literary passages, policy documents—carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating hypocrisy as simple name-calling; effective essays instead analyze why the gap between belief and behavior persists and what it reveals about power, self-interest, or social structure.

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Paper Undergraduate
Frantic Pursuit of the American
¶ … frantic pursuit of the American Dream persists several generations after F. Scott Fitzgerald penned the Great Gatsby. In fact, stories like the Great Gatsby continue to fill the pages of celebrity gossip tabloids.
Paper Masters
Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass, an American slave
In history there are few pieces of literature that can tell the true amount of horror and suffering that a certain group of people are forced to endure. One such novel that captures the brutality of slavery and the…
Paper Doctorate
Slavery in the American South
Slavery in the American South remains a topic of interest and fascination because it reveals the best and worst of the human spirit. Slavery was an aspect of the American culture that could only be addressed by…
Paper Undergraduate
War Prayer by Mark Twain
War Prayer by Mark Twain is a short story that uses irony and hyperbole to critique the zealous militarism gripping the hearts and minds of a community about to go to war. The first paragraph is a kind of stereotypical…
Paper Undergraduate
Spiegelman\'s Maus Series: A Discussion
Spiegelman's Maus Series: A Discussion about Humanity
Paper Undergraduate
Trial One of the Most
One of the most famous public permutations surrounding the issues of Darwinism, religion in the classroom, and the separation of Church and State was the 1925 Scopes Trial, also known as the Monkey Trial, held in…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Moral Relativism Is a Point-Of-View,
Moral Relativism is a point-of-view, which holds that the truth or justification of moral judgments, is not absolute but determined by society or its culture (Gowan 2004). It flourished in ancient times when moral…
Paper Undergraduate
Elizabethan Theatre: Entertainment and Social Appeal
Theatre in the Time of Elizabeth I: Popular Entertainment and Social Incentives for Attendance
Paper Undergraduate
Lessons learned from the Love Canal environmental crisis
¶ … history of Love Canal, the lessons learned, and the movement toward a proactive response to environmental protection.
Paper Undergraduate
Response to H.J. McCloskey's arguments
¶ … Atheist" by H.J. McCloskey and answer the following questions using "Philosophy of Religion-Thinking About Faith" second edition by C.Stephens Evans & R. Zacharary Manis and the article "The Absurdity of Life With…