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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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Thesis Undergraduate
Beginning or End of Unions
Unions are various organizations are formed by and for workers to practice collective wages, objectives, rules and benefits in a workplace environment. Unions started to grow mainly after the civil war as one of the…
Paper Undergraduate
Walk Down Wall Street Stock Valuation From
Malkiel notes that there were a number of speculative trends from the 1960s to 1990s, and that they all mended up in the same way. Every few years, the stock market has another bubble or speculative mania which soon crashes and levels off, such as overvalued food stocks in the 1980s or the Nifty Fifty blue chips in the 1970s, but in both cases the speculative phase ended and stocks returned to their normal values. By the 1990s, institutions accounted for more than 90% of the trading volume on the NYSE, and yet professional investors participated in several distinct speculative movements from the 1960s through the 1990s.
Research Paper Doctorate
Mortimer Adler and his educational philosophy
Few heirs apparent of both modern day philosophy and orthodox Christianity exist, unless one considers Mortimer Jerome Adler. Adler was a well-respected philosopher and educator, with influence in the religious sector…
Research Paper Doctorate
Media ethics: principles, standards, and professional practice
¶ … Media in America as the Fourth Estate: From Watergate to the Present
Paper Undergraduate
Responsible journalism: principles and practice
How the Press Covers the Most Important Events of Our Existence
Thesis Doctorate
Media: forms, functions, and contemporary applications
The existence of a pro-business, pro-government bias led to ineffectual journalistic coverage of U.S. unemployment during the period leading up to the 2008-2009 recession. In what has come to be known as the Great Recession because of its comparability to the Great Depression, the U.S. unemployment rate reached historic highs. The magnitude of the recession was such that economists and policy-makers should have been better prepared to manage the looming crisis, but instead were caught unawares because they relied on self-serving forecasts that minimized unemployment forecasts. The news media was complicit in its minimalist coverage of the unrealistic projections that the Bush White House and administration served up. This paper explores reasons the news media rarely challenged the consistently inaccurate unemployment forecasting, projections that should have informed policy decisions and warned the country that the U.S. was entering one of the worst employment crises in its history.
Paper Undergraduate
The portrayal of diversity in media: the Trayvon Martin case
This paper explains how the media has shifted from just being source of information and news to the general masses. How tt has gone to have an effect on the social, cultural, and psychological aspects on lives of people with them even realizing it. (Perse, 2000). The shooting of an African American boy named Trayvon Martin has been discussed in the media. The way different media sources represent this is analyzed and judged whether these sources discriminate the issue or the people involved in the scenario.
Research Paper Doctorate
Censorship in Music
Censorship Under the Guise of Protecting the Children
Paper Undergraduate
Researched Argument on the Jungle by Upton Sinclair
This paper examines the style of Upton Sinclair in his infamous work, The Jungle. It looks at specific stylistic devices the author used in order to strengthen his argument and make his point even more clear to the public. Although most of the book is written in direct language, it is filled with metaphors and similes that makes connections between individual incidences and the larger society.
Research Paper Doctorate
Karl Marx Marx\'s Impact Can Only Be
Marx's impact can only be compared with that of religious figures like Jesus or Muhammad. Nearly four out of every ten people alive today live under governments which consider themselves Marxist" (Singer, 1).