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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 Masters
Five Critical Essays on The Catcher in the Rye Reviewed
The Catcher in the Rye was first published in 1951. The novel deals with the issues of identity, belonging, connection and alienation. This paper will review five articles written by four authors on the novel: Lisa Privitera, Peter Shaw, M. duMais Svogun and Yasuhiro Takeuchi. Each article takes a particular view and interpretation of the events within the book.
Essay Doctorate
Stone Diaries by Carol Shields
This paper discusses Carol Shield's Pulitzer Prize winning novel "The Stone Diaries." In the final chapter of the book, entitled "Death," the main character Daisy Flett finally dies. During the course of her final sickness and in the aftermath of her death, both she and her family have to face the reality of her life and how little she has lived.
Paper Doctorate
Race in Today\'s Mass Media Channel Surfing
Channel surfing during primetime these days, will often times create a personal dilemma on what show to watch and usually, it is one we will stick with from season to season - if the 'powers that be' allow it a renewed…
Research Paper Doctorate
Gold and Iron: Bismarck, Bleichröder, and German Unification
Columbia historian Fritz Stern gathered thousands of previously unpublished documents, letters, and correspondences between the two foremost shapers of German unification, Otto von Bismarck and Gerson von Bleichrder.
Research Paper Doctorate
Satire Is. The American Heritage College Dictionary
¶ … satire is. The American Heritage College Dictionary describes satire as a literary work that attacks human vice or folly through irony, derision, or wit. Using this definition, we will focus on the manner in which…
Thesis Undergraduate
Cuban Five Criminals or Antiterrorist
Cuban Five -- Criminals or Antiterrorists
Paper Doctorate
Feminist analysis of Jane Austen's Persuasion
"I Will Not Allow Books to Prove Anything":
Paper Undergraduate
Final paper topics and research directions
This is a comparative analysis O'Connor's A Good Man is hard to find and, Faulkner's A Rose for Emily. The paper maintains a balanced discussion of two texts and really making connections between the two texts. The paper focuses on the relevance of the texts to the rise of the struggle against discrimination in the southern states.
Paper Undergraduate
Eugene O\'Neill\'s Mythic Re-Enactments
This paper examines Eugene O'Neill's use of the mythic structure of Aeschylus' Oresteia in his trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra. The play suggests that O'Neill's play is built around acts of repetition and re-enactment: not only does O'Neill himself re-enact the Oresteia, but his characters seem to ritually re-enact the behavior of those who have gone before. The play connects Mannon's death in the play to a ritualized re-enactment of the death of Abraham Lincoln.
Research Paper Doctorate
Slavery the Ethically Repugnant Institution of Slavery
The ethically repugnant institution of slavery in pre-Civil War America manifested itself in the cruel conditions of daily life for thousands of African-Americans. Nothing can quite capture the actual suffering endured…