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Laughter
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Laughter is a universal human behavior that sits at the intersection of psychology, health sciences, literature, and cultural studies. Students write about it across a wide range of courses, from nursing and health education to creative writing and the humanities. What makes it academically compelling is its dual nature: laughter functions as both a physiological response and a social phenomenon, capable of relieving stress, signaling cultural identity, and even influencing the healing process. Its presence in contexts as varied as clinical care, comedy as a genre, and existentialist philosophy means it resists simple categorization and rewards analysis from multiple disciplinary angles.

The papers archived on this topic approach laughter from several distinct directions. Health-focused essays examine how humor and laughter produce positive benefits for individuals managing pain, stress, and illness, with some work connecting these effects to technology and modern medicine. Literary and cultural analyses take a different route, exploring humor through drama, the comedy genre, poetry such as Langston Hughes's work, and movements like Surrealism and Existentialism. Other essays treat laughter through personal narrative, aging and stereotype, nursing practice, and even the role humor plays in community and spiritual life.

A strong essay on laughter needs a focused thesis that commits to one dimension — physiological, cultural, or literary — rather than trying to cover all three at once. Evidence drawn from clinical research carries weight in health arguments, while close textual analysis supports humanities claims. The most common pitfall is treating laughter as uniformly positive without acknowledging contexts where humor excludes, demeans, or complicates the situations it touches.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Intellectual disability: concepts and clinical perspectives
Students with a diagnosis of mental retardation present particular problems for teachers because their disability goes to the heart of what is supposed to happen at school. These students don't have the capacity to…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Bluest Eye Toni Morrison\'s Book
Toni Morrison's book the Bluest Eye offers alert readers a number of useful lessons about life and about human nature. Some of the lessons are things that people should not do to one another, and other lessons are just…
Paper Doctorate
Twentieth Century Theater the Group
Overall, The Mercury Group in many ways embodies the spirit of theater in the 1930s here in the United States. Its productions represented a move into a more modern existence, while still echoing the painful experiences of the Great Depression in an artful and complex way. The group helped move theater into more mass distributed media, and paved a path to a new sense of modernity.
Essay Doctorate
Comedy techniques in satirical literature: Swift and Wodehouse compared
How does one describe the nature of comedy? Comedy is both simple and complicated. How comedy works is simple, but what is funny is complicated. Comedy describes the nature of the universe in universal terms.
Paper High School
Three poems from And the sun still dared to shine
Survival in the Holocaust concentration camps meant something different for every human being who lived as a prisoner. And it meant the same. Survival meant enduring dread, fear, pain, starvation, exhaustion, and debasement. Survival required ever increasing degrees of physical, mental, and emotional adaptation and tolerance. Survival meant ever-increasing extremes of degradation in every realm—degradation of faith, hope, strength, standards. And survival meant being lucky at every turn, in every moment, with each breath. In And The Sun Still Dared to Shine, Peter Scheponik wrote about surviving and survival. To those who are free, the words are the relatively same. To those featured in the poems "Afterlife," Love Photos," and "Punishment," the cut made between surviving and survival happened on the second hand.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Positivist Theory of Crime Lombroso
Introduction Cesare Lombroso is held to be the founder of modern criminology and to have introduced the positivist movement in the latter part of the nineteenth century, which has made a more scientific approach to criminology available. Empirical scientific research in understanding criminality was first introduced by the positivist approach. According to Farr (nd) positivism is based in logic and is "the philosophy that combined epistemological phenomenalism with ‘scientism' that is, with the belief in the desirability of scientific and technological progress." (Farr, nd, p.2)
Paper Undergraduate
Carol Burnett: life, career, and television legacy
Carol Burnet was one of the best-loved comediennes of the 20th century who set the standard for variety shows in the 1960-1970 decade (Purdy 2002). Her show, the Carol Burnett Show, offered a mix of music and comedy and…
Paper High School
Venice's transformation from the early modern period to the present day
This work in writing is in the form of a letter which relates the changes occurring in Venice and specifically related to its artistic and architectural history. The changes described are those occurring when possession of ownership of Venice changed hands and particularly those wrought at the instructions of Napoleon.
Research Paper Doctorate
Emergence of Colonial Resistance in Things Fall Apart
Chinua Achebe is one of the most influential and powerful writers of today, and he is also one of the most widely published writers today. Chinua Achebe has in fact written more than twenty-one novels, and short…
Paper Undergraduate
Admired Those That Have Done
¶ … admired those that have done remarkable things in their lives. They remained in the collective memory of the community as valuable products of humanity. Ever since the early ages, as plays were performed in the…