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Islam
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Islam is one of the world's major monotheistic religions, centered on submission to Allah and the teachings preserved in its sacred texts. Students across religious studies, history, political science, and humanities courses write about Islam because it raises enduring questions about faith, law, culture, and power. Its historical reach across the Middle East and beyond makes it academically rich, touching on theology, civilization, gender, and governance in ways that invite sustained critical analysis.

The papers archived on this topic reflect several distinct approaches. Comparative essays are especially common, placing Islam alongside Christianity and Judeo-Christian traditions to examine shared and divergent beliefs, practices, and historical development. Historical analyses explore events such as the split between Sunni and Shi'ite traditions, as well as the broader arc of Middle Eastern civilization. Other papers take a thematic approach, examining concepts like predestination and free will within Islamic thought, the influence of Islam on Middle Eastern literature, or the relationship between Islam and democracy. The role of women in Muslim life and the political dimensions of religion also appear as recurring focal points.

A strong essay on Islam begins with a precise, arguable thesis rather than a broad statement about the religion as a whole. Evidence drawn from specific historical events, doctrinal distinctions, or cultural practices carries far more weight than generalizations about what Muslims believe. Comparative essays benefit from identifying a clear analytical framework before listing similarities and differences. The most common pitfall is treating Islam as a monolithic tradition; acknowledging internal diversity — across regions, sects, and historical periods — demonstrates the analytical depth that strong academic writing requires.

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Paper Undergraduate
Abraham in Two Holy Texts
The story of Abraham in the Bible shares similarities and differences with the story of Abraham in the Koran. In the Bible, Abraham is quite clearly defined as one who resigned himself to a particular religion -- Judaism.
Paper Undergraduate
East Asian Politics When Compared
When compared to the Western paradigm, East Asian politics is particularly complex as a result of its dichotomous relationship between the tradition of law and the conception of ritual.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Sikhism: The Effect on Indian
From ancient times to the present, religion and one's personal beliefs have influenced the culture and society of the followers of that particular religion. Sikhism, although not a new religion, has recently received…
Paper Undergraduate
Radical Islamism and Al Qaeda
Generally, the roots of radical Islamism can be traced back almost two millennia, to the original conflict between the two principal Muslim sects, those who would later become the Sunni and the Shi 'a Muslim, over the…
Paper Undergraduate
Is it ethical to raise animals for human consumption
¶ … ethical to raise animals for human consumption? That question can have many different answers, depending first upon one's concept of ethics and morality. Moreover, answers will depend upon in what period of history…
Research Paper Doctorate
Islam's relationship to Arabic language and universal religious translation
At first glance, it would appear that the fact that the Koran, Islam's holy book, cannot be officially translated out of its original Arabic limits Islam's ability to be a universal religion.
Essay Doctorate
Sundiata, Role Magic, Fate, Supernatural, Dreaming Play?
The supernatural, and all of its manifestations -- including magic, dreaming and fate -- play a highly substantial role in the plot of D.T. Niane's Sundiata: An Epic of Old Mali. This fact is due in part to this tale's…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Nationalist Struggles for Self-Determination -
Nationalist struggles for self-Determination - the wave of decolonization in Algeria and India
Paper Undergraduate
Pillars: The Religious Common Thread
1998 documentary on the subject of some of the world's major religions is visionary in its approach, which may have seemed academic at the time of its conception but is today aggressively relevant.
Paper Undergraduate
Legal Traditions, and the Relevance
¶ … Legal Traditions, and the Relevance to Business