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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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Thesis Doctorate
Literary Criticism of the Works of William Wells Brown
The paper is a literary criticism drawing literature from the works of the Afro-American author, William Wells Brown. The writings, the President's Daughter (1853) and A Tale of the Southern States (1864) provides relevant information for completion of the paper. In addition, the paper offers an overview of William Browns Biography.
Paper Undergraduate
Flew Over the Cuckoo\'s Nest
The book One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey provides a vivid but very depressing account of mental illness, especially the way mental illness was treated in the time period of the book (written in 1962).
Research Paper Doctorate
see below
Mark Twain's realism in fully discovered in the novel The adventures of Huckleberry Finn, book which is known to most of readers since high school, but which has a deeper moral and educational meaning than a simple…
Research Paper Doctorate
American foreign policy: overview and analysis
¶ … American Foreign Policy from three articles from Annual Edition's American Foreign Policy: Article 33, "Musclebound: The Limits of U.S. Power" by Stephen M. Walt; Article 12, "A Small Peace for the Middle East" by…
Research Paper Doctorate
Brown vs. Board of Education
The immediate aftermath of the Supreme Court's Decision
Research Paper Doctorate
Fall Camus\'s Story, the Fall
Camus's story, "The Fall" tells the story of a self-proclaimed penitent judge, who gets his jollies from confessing of his own sins in order to implicate others whom he may then judge.
Paper Doctorate
Swift\'s a Modest Prposal Surprise Ending -
This paper briefly examines the ideas put forth in Jonathon Swift's A Modest Proposal, a suggestion that children of the poor be eaten for food by the wealthy. The paper concludes that this piece was written in order to make the upper class examine their conscience with regards to the living conditions of the poor in Ireland.
Research Paper Doctorate
Les Misérables: themes and historical context in Hugo's novel
Victor Hugo is remembered today as one of the most notable and revolutionary writers of French literature. The social consciousness displayed in many of his novels is evidence of the conscience developed over a lifetime…
Research Paper Doctorate
Ambrose Bierce Facts About Bierce\'s
Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce (June 24, 1842- 1914?) was an American satirist, critic, poet, short story (horror) writer, editor, and journalist.
Research Paper Doctorate
Improving Healthcare in a Typical
¶ … Improving Healthcare in a Typical Tertiary Healthcare Facility