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Journalism
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Journalism sits at the intersection of language, ethics, media studies, and civic life, making it a natural subject for English and communications courses alike. Students are asked to examine how news is produced, who controls it, and what responsibilities reporters carry toward the public. The field raises questions about credibility, objectivity, and the relationship between the press and society that have only grown more urgent as media landscapes shift. Works like Merrill's arguments on the professionalization of journalism provide theoretical grounding, while figures such as Hunter S. Thompson illustrate how individual voices and unconventional styles have challenged mainstream reporting conventions.

The papers archived on this subject approach journalism from several distinct angles. Some focus on professional standards and the tensions created when commercial pressures and corporate business priorities conflict with editorial independence. Others take a historical or biographical approach, tracing how specific journalists or prizes like the Pulitzer have shaped the field. A number of papers examine structural issues, including the revolving door between journalism and other industries, while technological change — particularly the internet's effect on print news — draws analytical attention to how reporting and public consumption of stories have transformed in recent decades.

A strong essay on journalism needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim that "the media is important." Evidence drawn from specific reporting practices, named outlets, documented case studies, or theoretical frameworks about the press carries more weight than generalizations about society. Credibility and sourcing should be addressed directly when relevant. The most common pitfall is conflating all journalism into a single category — distinguishing between print, digital, investigative, and opinion reporting will sharpen any argument considerably.

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Paper Doctorate
Comparing Berthe Morisot's The Basket Chair and Gustave Caillebotte's The Orange Trees
This 5-page paper compares and contrasts two Impressionist paintings: Morisot's "The Basket Chair" and Caillebotte's "The Orange Trees." Issues related to gender and class are discussed in relation to the paintings.
Paper Undergraduate
Intelligence intervention in democratic state politics: origins, reasons, and prevention
Origins and Reasons of Intelligence Intervention in Policy -- Uri Bar-Joseph
Essay Doctorate
The Jungle and Fast Food Nation: A Century of Meatpacking Exploitation
The American meat industry has been a source of public contention ever since industrialization, periodically brought to the fore by investigations into and revelations of unsafe labor and food safety practices.
Paper Undergraduate
Sexuality and Self image
Sexuality and Self-Image: Women in Eastern Asia and the United States
Paper Doctorate
Privacy What Happens to Privacy
In order to answer the question "what happens to privacy in the age of Facebook," we first have to understand what is meant by the "age of Facebook." This means understanding the influences and ramifications of recent…
Paper Undergraduate
Dispatches by Michael Herr Narrative
Narrative voice and perspective in Herr's Dispatches
Paper Masters
Legalizing Marijuana There Is Presently
There is presently much controversy regarding legalization of marijuana, as the number of supporters for the cause appears to grow concomitantly with the number of people opposing it.
Paper Undergraduate
Indian-Israeli Relations Valuable to India\'s
¶ … Indian-Israeli Relations Valuable to India's National Interests?
Paper Undergraduate
Advertising and Word of Mouth
Verizon's popular TV advertisement's tag line, "Can you hear me now?" stresses the value of hearing what someone has to say. What happened to Josh Vondran, however, according to Andy Piper (2008) in the article, "Stolen…
Paper Undergraduate
United States Still the World\'s
¶ … United States Still the World's Dominant Media Economy?