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Italy
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Italy sits at the center of some of Western civilization's most consequential cultural, political, and economic history, making it a frequent subject across disciplines including art history, European history, literature, music, economics, and business. Its role as the birthplace of the Renaissance, the seat of ancient Rome, and a modern European economy gives the topic remarkable academic range. Works such as Giovanni Boccaccio's The Decameron appear in literary courses, while the High Renaissance and its conditions attract attention in art history and civilization surveys. The country's post-war transformation and its place in contemporary corporate and economic contexts extend the topic well into the social sciences.

Student papers on Italy take a wide variety of approaches. Historical and contextual essays examine periods such as post-war Italy from 1946 through the mid-1950s or trace the conditions that produced the High Renaissance. Comparative work sets the High Renaissance against the Northern Renaissance, or contrasts early and high Renaissance styles and curricula. Literary analysis focuses on texts like The Decameron, while art history papers survey Italian Renaissance art broadly. Case-study approaches appear in business-oriented work, with papers examining specific companies such as Mantero Seta SpA or applying corporate finance frameworks to Italian firms. Music history essays address composers like Domenico Scarlatti, and architectural analysis engages figures such as Carlo Scarpa.

A strong essay on Italy begins with a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one period, discipline, or argument rather than surveying the country broadly. Evidence drawn from primary texts, specific artworks, economic data, or historical events carries more weight than general claims about Italian greatness or influence. The most common pitfall is treating Italy as a monolithic subject; successful papers anchor their argument in a defined context and resist the temptation to cover too much ground at once.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Rise and Fall of Rome and How
¶ … rise and fall of Rome and how Christianity affected the history of Rome.
Paper Doctorate
Hofstede's Cultural Dimensions: France, Italy, Arab World & Indonesia
People in societies exhibiting a large degree of power distance accept a hierarchical order in which everybody has a place and which needs no further justification, but in societies with low power distance, people strive to equalize the distribution of power and demand justification for inequalities of power. France, Indonesia and the Arab World all score high on the Power Distance scale compared to Italy, which makes them more authoritarian societies. With a score of 68, France scores high on the scale of the PDI, compared to Italy which has a score of 53. It is therefore a society in which inequalities are accepted. Hierarchy is needed if not existential; the superiors may have privileges and are often inaccessible. Power is highly centralized in France, as well as Paris centralizes administrations, transports etc.
Research Paper Doctorate
Schooling in Renaissance Italy
The popular expression is that we are what we eat - but it is at least as true that we are what we study. As Paul Grendler outlines in his study Schooling in Renaissance Italy, Literacy and Learning, 1300-1600, we can…
Essay Undergraduate
Governmental CSR Policies Social Responsibility and Regulation
The origin of the formal construct of corporate social responsibility is easily traced back to the 1950s (Carroll, 1999, p. 268). Over four decades, the concept had been expanded to include three prongs: Business…
Paper Doctorate
Case study analysis with two research questions
Tommy Hilfiger has struggled to compete with the upscale brands of France and Italy. The European customers are quality conscious and price is only secondary to the quality. Hilfiger adopted a strategy of internationalization. This was based on several potentially lucrative outcomes being contemplated by Hilfiger management. The initial purpose served by selling internationally is that the company tries to compensate for the loss of domestic sales. Risk reduction and economies of scale are other reasons of selling internationally. Selling domestically on the other hand entangles the company in increasingly complex and unrewarding actions. In Europe, Hilfiger merchandise is costs more due to the management due to inefficiencies in distribution network of retailers and wholesalers. Customers in Europe demand better quality as well. Increasing cost in Europe may leave the brand reflective of a non-uniform strategy. The paper highlights Tommy Hilfiger's issues of doing business in an increasingly competitive business environment.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Vatican City: history, government, and significance
¶ … Vatican City in Rome. Vatican City is actually a city-state located within the city of Rome, Italy. It came into existence in 1929, and is governed by the Pope. As a city-state, it is considered a country, making it…
Research Paper Doctorate
Bollywood in the UK: Hindi Film Market and NRI Viewership
¶ … viewer ship of Hindi Films with respect to the Non-Asian population in the UK
Research Paper Doctorate
Atomic Bomb and Nuclear Power - Blessing
DANNENBERG, Germany, Nov 14 (Reuters) - A force of 15,000 police sealed roads in part of northern Germany on Wednesday in a crackdown against protesters trying to disrupt the final leg of a shipment of nuclear waste.
Paper Doctorate
Arabic Literature the Yacoubian Building
Often a writer goes about the process of adapting a story from one type of media to another certain components of the original story have to be altered. This is particularly true when adapting a book into a screenplay…
Paper Masters
Ottoman Empire in 1683, When the Ottoman
In 1683, when the Ottoman forces were besieging Vienna, the empire reached its high-water mark and then began its slow, steady decline after suffering a major defeat in this battle. Only very gradually did Europeans come to perceive it as the Sick Man of Europe, however, since it was still formidable enough to play an important role in the defeat of Russia in the Crimean War of 1854-56. This was its last major victory, however, since by 1878 it had lost most of the Balkans, or Rumelia as it was known to the Ottomans, and with it much of its tax revenue and the recruitment ground for the Janissaries. It lost Crete in 1896 and Macedonia and Thrace after the Balkan Wars in 1912-13, and ceased to be a European power.