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Imagination
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Imagination sits at the intersection of philosophy, literature, psychology, and the arts, making it a subject that appears across a wide range of academic disciplines. Courses in literary studies, philosophy of mind, creative writing, and cultural history all prompt students to engage with how imagination shapes human thought and expression. Its academic interest lies in the tension between imagination and reality — how the mind constructs ideas and experiences that extend beyond what is immediately present. Works and figures such as René Descartes, W. B. Yeats, Edgar Allan Poe, Shakespeare, and the poetry of Marge Piercy all raise questions about how imaginative capacity defines consciousness, artistic vision, and even selfhood.

The papers gathered here approach imagination from notably varied angles. Literary analysis dominates, with close readings of texts by Ursula K. Le Guin and explorations of the liberating power of imagination in works like the story of Asher Lev. Historical approaches examine how movements such as English Romanticism in the 1790s and Abstract Expressionism treated imaginative freedom as a cultural and political force. Other essays take a philosophical or speculative direction, drawing on Descartes and projecting imaginative thinking into future urban or professional contexts.

A strong essay on imagination needs a focused thesis that connects imaginative capacity to a specific outcome — artistic creation, moral understanding, or resistance to reality's constraints. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, philosophical argument, or clearly contextualized historical examples carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating imagination too abstractly; grounding the concept in a specific text, thinker, or historical moment keeps the argument precise and persuasive.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Nineteenth century literature and critical analysis
¶ … Madame Bovary's entire experience is by way of approaching her own obscurity, and indeed her own demise, and her death as an individual. The essay by Elisabeth Fronfen is, for the most part, very perceptive and the…
Essay Masters
Civilization vs. Wilderness: Prominent Literary Theme
Civilization and the Wilderness -- Early American Literature
Essay Doctorate
Synopsis and chaffer: a comparative analysis
Abstract: This paper is basically three separate essays that revolve around the play written by Peter Shaffer, Equus. Equus is the name of a horse that is adored by a young boy Alan. The main characters of the play are Alan, a 17 year old boy, and his psychiatrist Dysart. When Alan sees the picture of the horse every day, he starts believing that the horse is the God. Having this belief, he starts considering Equus as the God
Essay Doctorate
Goethe and Marlowe: Faust
A comparison of the endings of these two different handlings of the Faust legend by Goethe and Marlowe is used to illustrate crucial differences between not only Goethe’s and Marlowe’s differing literary ambitions, but also their different religious or spiritual worldviews. The paper offers close readings of the ending of each drama.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Slave Narratives to Middle Class Stories
This paper provides an overview of African American literature, beginning with slave narratives. It discusses first hand accounts of people who were born into or sold into slavery and how they experienced the institution and what slavery did to their families. Then, it moves on to a discussion of African American literature in the Jim Crow era and how that impacted both male and female self image.
Essay Doctorate
Creation in Ovid\'s Metamorphoses
This paper explores myths of creation in Ovid's Metamorphoses. It focuses on three specific episodes in the poem: the story of Arachne and Minerva in Book VI, the story of Daedalus in Book VIII, and the speech of Pythagoras in the concluding book of the poem. The paper observes how images of parenthood as creation are mingled with imagery of artistic creation--ultimately suggesting that Ovid's own work as a poet serves as a model for the creation myths contained in the poem.
Paper Doctorate
Land in O Pioneers
In his response to Query XIX in Notes on the State of Virginia, Thomas Jefferson makes a case for agrarianism on cultural grounds. For Jefferson, as Leo Marx tells us in The Machine in the Garden (1964), agriculture is not so much an economic as a moral pursuit: “the physical attributes of the land are less important than its metaphoric powers. What matters most is its "function as a landscape" ..an image in the mind that represents aesthetic, moral, political, and even religious values" (Marx 127-28)
Paper Doctorate
Virtue Ethics and Nursing Care for Abortion Services
If anything, the prolife and prochoice debate over the legality of abortion is continuing to escalate and clinicians are caught in the crossfire. This essay examines the main arguments provided by both factions and then examines virtue ethics as the better framework, when compared to deontological and utilitarian ethics, for guiding nurses faced with providing abortion care.
Essay Doctorate
Postmodern literature: key themes and characteristics
In terms of the use of experimental techniques in the assigned readings this semester, I think I would judge Vonnegut to be the best and Ishmael Reed to be the worst. The simple criterion here is accessibility.
Thesis Doctorate
Cameras Used With Maya
Auto Desk Maya 3D Graphic Camera Functions