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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
Satire in Huckleberry Finn
Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a novel of great acclaim, and great controversy. The work embodies ideologies of the day, utilizing satire to demonstrate the long and short of the institutions and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Literary analysis concepts and methods
English literature (Chaucer & Shakespeare)
Research Paper Doctorate
Comparing and contrasting concepts and approaches
Character Analysis of Dee in Alice Walker's "Everyday Use" and the Narrator in Ralph Ellison's "Battle Royal"
Research Paper Masters
Spade Walking Down to Examine a Murder
This paper analyzes a scene from the Maltese Falcon where Sam Spade surveys the scene of a crime, focusing on the film noir lighting style, costumes, and Bogart's acting. It then discusses Cooper's establishment of the American heroic ideal as that of the lone wolf and outsider, adaptable to any situation. Finally, it concludes that this Cooper's loner hero has defined heroic figures in American films ever since.
Paper Doctorate
Fran it Is Difficult to Discern What
The Frank Jude case presents a prime ethical dilemma of the United States criminal justice system. In this case, an unarmed, partly African American man was savagely tortured by a plethora of off and on-duty police officers. The ethical issue this case brings to the forefront of the criminal justice system is: is the police's fealty to other police officers or to those it serves?
Research Paper Doctorate
Wall Street and financial market dynamics
Compared to what it looks like and implies today, Wall Street had relatively humble beginnings. Its towering skyscrapers and art Deco architecture, its digital tickers and wireless waves resemble little the original New…
Essay Doctorate
Leisure as the basis of culture: Pieper and Thoreau
This is two journals dealing with the concept of leisure. The first discusses philosopher Pieper and how he feels about leisure. He connects education and leisure and feels people do not learn for improvement anymore but for money. The second journal is about Henry David Thoreau and the "Economy" section of his book "Walden" where he believes men work without living.
Research Paper Doctorate
Mission Trade: A Primary Goal
Trade: a Primary Goal and (Questionable) Accomplishment of European Groups, as Shown within the novel Silence and the film the Mission
Paper Undergraduate
Task force creation and implementation strategies
Task force case study: Creating a new parole policy to reduce crime and expenditures on crime
Paper Doctorate
Catholic Church in Spain and the United States
Catholic church and public policy have remarked that the members of American clergy in general, without even excepting those who do not admit religious liberty, are all in favour of civil freedom; but they do not…