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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 Undergraduate
Lies My Teacher Told Me
This paper is a critical book review of the scathing indictment of the American education system: Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong. The book analyzes the way history is presented in American history and civic textbooks. The presentation effectively whitewashes certain aspects of American history and dilutes the intensity of long-standing historical debates.
Paper Masters
Sports journalism: history, practice, and contemporary issues
The paper is an imaginary exercise. The writer is to imagine him/herself as a sports journalist covering a basketball game. The author chose to cover a basketball game a part of NCAA March Madness: Syracuse vs. Ohio State. The paper is an analysis of the experience of covering this game and answering a short set of reflective questions.
Essay Doctorate
How media writers influence society through examples
¶ … media in the United States plays an increasingly more active role in what we see, what we hear, how we think, and how we learn about the rest of our world. The media today is comprised of massive, powerful…
Paper Masters
Johnson, T.J. and Kaye, B.K.
Johnson, T.J. And Kaye, B.K. (2004). Wag the Blog: How Reliance on Traditional Media and the Internet Influence Credibility Perceptions of Weblogs Among Blog Users. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Vol.
Paper Doctorate
Yes, I Am a Student, but I
This is a paper that involved Ethos (credibility and ethical appeal), Pathos (emotional images) and logos (explaining things through reasoning). The paper reports on a high school baseball game by a writer who is also a college student. the paper points out how the student got his first job being paid for reporting, and how the enjoyment and passion of doing something he really loves drives him to continue and try to improve.
Research Paper Doctorate
Accuracy of George Orwell\'s Predictions
The Accuracy of George Orwell's Predictions and What They Hold for Our Future
Paper Undergraduate
Review of Kinzer's book on U.S. foreign policy
Harkening back to Jacksonian politics of the 1800s, Manifest Destiny, and most certainly the aggressive foreign policy of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Overthrow is a historical roller-coaster ride from the…
Paper Undergraduate
Classify Information and Democracy Classifying
Classifying information has been a big issue over the years. Especially when it comes down to democracy. Democracy is basically discovered on the standard that the ethical authority of government comes from the agreement of the governed. That consent is not mainly that meaningful, in fact, unless it is knowledgeable, when government decides to make some decisions that are done in secret, chance for corruption really goes up and government's responsibility to the people goes down.
Research Paper Doctorate
Religion and politics: historical perspectives and contemporary dynamics
Uses and Abuses of the Concept of Orientalism
Paper Doctorate
Strategy for developing and presenting moral arguments in professional ethics
This paper examines how to resolve an ethical problem based on the Cooper and Miller's scenario where they faced an ethical dilemma on whether to comply with role morality or ordinary morality. Generally, the article focuses on examining whether journalists should break their confidences in order to help the more universal pursuit of justice or whether they should cooperate with legal authorities by breaking confidentiality agreements. Since this is a philosophy paper analyzing a professional ethics issue, the evaluation is based on "A strategy for understanding, developing, and presenting moral arguments."