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Industrial Revolution
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The Industrial Revolution ranks among the most transformative periods in modern history, making it a central subject in courses covering European history, economic history, world history, and social history. Roughly spanning the late eighteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries, the period saw fundamental shifts in technology, labor organization, and social structure that reshaped daily life across Europe and beyond. Students are drawn to it because it raises enduring questions about how economic development distributes costs and benefits across a society, and why some countries industrialized earlier or more successfully than others.

The papers archived on this topic approach industrialization from several distinct angles. Many focus on Britain as the originating case, examining specific conditions that enabled early mechanization and factory-based production. Others take a broader European or comparative frame, tracing economic history from the 1800s through the early twentieth century. A significant number analyze social consequences — particularly the experiences of workers, women, and children under new industrial conditions — while others track changes in the standard of living over time. Some papers extend the lens to continuities and changes across regions like East Asia between 1750 and the present.

A strong essay on the Industrial Revolution needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad narrative summary of events. Evidence drawn from specific economic conditions, labor practices, technological developments, or social outcomes carries the most weight. Comparative evidence — showing how different countries or groups experienced industrialization differently — can sharpen an argument considerably. The most common pitfall is treating industrialization as uniformly progressive; acknowledging its uneven impact on workers, women, and children demonstrates the analytical depth instructors expect.

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Paper Undergraduate
Neo-classical art and romanticism
¶ … Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog" by Caspar David Friedrich, a paining I believe embodies both Romanticism and reality on the same canvas. Romanticism was the result of several major events that took place in the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Scientific method fundamentals and application
One of the predominant changes occurring in the late 20th and early 21st centuries has been the manner in which economic, political and cultural movements have evolved to bring the world closer.
Research Paper Doctorate
The nature-human relationship and environmental interaction
Hurricane Katrina has shown most blatantly that nature and man live at odds with one another. People and the planet on which they live have for centuries been at odds with one another.
Research Paper Doctorate
Historical concepts and contexts
¶ … 13th century, the world's civilizations -- by the most accurate of definitions -- were emerging from lower cultural and technological evolution to a higher plane of refinement. Thought, manners, life situations, and…
Research Paper Doctorate
American Civil War
Historians customarily write about past events as if each one occurred in isolation, neatly encapsulated in a sealed container, or chapter." (Potter 1977, 177.) So wrote historian David Potter, whose multi-faceted…
Research Paper Doctorate
Human Causes of Climate Change and the Greenhouse Effect
Before the Industrial Revolution, climate change was caused by mainly by four fundamental factors: variations in the earth's orbital characteristics; variations in the earth's atmospheric carbon dioxide levels; volcanic…
Research Paper Doctorate
Authors Comparisons of the Costs of Cities
There must be few citizens of the 21st century - at least few who are citizens of both the 21st century and the First World - who do not view the city as a problematic accomplishment of humanity.
Essay Doctorate
Albert's group effort: implications and conclusions on transforming section content
¶ … job is largely an outgrowth of the industrial revolution's efficiency demands. There was a widespread notion of substitution of machine power for people power, management specialists Adam Smith and Fredrick Taylor…
Paper Undergraduate
Cross cultural research and practice
Edward Tylor (1832-1917) defines culture as a collection of customs, laws, morals, knowledge, and symbols displayed by a society and its constituting members. Culture is form of collective expression by groups of people. Since the dawn of industrial revolution and later, due to an increased integration of cultures across nations, cross-cultural analysis has assumed much import in scholastic discourse within psychology, anthropology, and psychology. Present study is an endeavor to make a cross-cultural assessment of American and Japanese culture. More differences than similarities have been found in both the cultures. Where Japanese culture fosters Aimai, meaning ambiguity and vagueness, Americans are intolerant to this characteristic. Based on Hofstede's four dimensional theory of cross-cultural analysis, findings regarding individualism-collectivism index, power distance index, uncertainty tolerance, and masculinity-femininity index of American and Japanese people have been presented. Secondary research of pertinent literature and rigorous comparative analysis reveals that while both cultures are monocentric and value masculinity, they are diametrically opposed in uncertainty avoidance and individualism-collectivism index. The paper is divided in seven sections each highlighting different but interconnected theme regarding cross-cultural analysis of American and Japanese cultures.
Paper Doctorate
Ecology and Art + Culture
The document considers the ways in which the artist Claude Monet used nature in his art. This is then used as a starting point for discussing the role of nature in human life today. Basically, the premise is that humanity has tended to forget the importance of nature, not only for survival, but also for its aesthetic qualities.