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Love
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What is Love?

Love is one of the most examined subjects in academic writing, appearing across disciplines including literature, psychology, sociology, cultural studies, and philosophy. Its complexity makes it a rich site for analysis — love intersects with power, identity, social structures, and personal experience in ways that resist simple definition. Students encounter it in courses ranging from literary criticism to gender studies, often because it raises fundamental questions about human motivation, social norms, and the tension between individual desire and broader cultural forces. Works like Ovid's Art of Love, Nella Larsen's Passing, and Flaubert's Madame Bovary appear frequently because they dramatize love's contradictions — how it can liberate or destroy, connect or isolate.

The papers collected here approach love from strikingly varied angles. Literary explication appears in close readings of poems such as Galway Kinnell's "After Making Love We Hear Footsteps" and in analyses of how Charles's love for Emma drives the tragedy in Madame Bovary. Cultural and historical perspectives surface in discussions of gay marriage, theories of male and female differences in love, and the Chinese story "Love Must Not be Forgotten." Interview-based and personal approaches ground the topic in lived experience, while critical readings of media like the Dove Real Beauty campaign extend love into questions of representation and power.

A strong essay on love avoids treating it as a universal feeling and instead anchors its thesis in a specific context — a text, relationship structure, historical moment, or cultural framework. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, theoretical frameworks, or documented personal accounts carries more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is conflating romantic idealism with critical argument; the strongest essays maintain analytical distance even when the subject is emotionally charged.

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Research Paper Doctorate
City of Joy,\" by Dominique Lapierre. Specifically,
¶ … City of Joy," by Dominique Lapierre. Specifically, it will study the underlying message of hope and love that permeates the book, and how such a devastating life can be a "city of joy" to the slum dwellers in…
Paper Undergraduate
Euripides' Hippolytus: critical analysis and themes
This paper discusses the moral implications of Euripides' tragedy of "Hippolytus," a drama of a young man whose stepmother forms an unnatural attachment for him. The play examines the role of fate and hubris in human affairs. The major lovers of the play do not really act out of their own volition, but because of the controlling intelligence of wrathful Aphrodite.
Paper Masters
Lindbergh, A.M. (1955). Gift From the Sea.
Lindbergh, A.M. (1955). Gift from the Sea. New York: Panteon.
Paper Masters
Visual Rhetoric Bandit Rhetoric Is the Use
The collaborative effort between the Humane Society, Maddie's Fund, and the Ad Council has resulted in a series of professionally-designed visual advertisements that seek to emphasize the mutual benefits of shelter pet adoption, from the perspective of both the pet owner and the pet. The traditional benefits of pet companionship, including loyalty, comfort, and warmth, are communicated through the image, alongside messages that the owner has something important to offer the shelter pet. Although the latter is communicated mainly through an anacoluthon pun, the point is valid despite being packaged in an anthropomorphic message. This approach stands in stark contrast to shocking photos of caged animals that tend to prey upon the viewer's distaste for suffering, and therefore deemphasizes the nature of the shelter's existence to the point of irrelevance, as it should.
Paper Doctorate
Walt Whitman and Herman Melville \"Crossing Brooklyn
Walt Whitman's poem "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" and Herman Melville's short story "Bartleby the Scrivener" are set in New York City during the early years of the industrial revolution, but are markedly different in tone, theme and the perceptions and feelings of the main characters. Melville's characters exist without joy, love or hope, and merely drag themselves through a life of drudgery and alienation, without making any human connections to each other or to nature. Mankind in Bartleby's world is simply trapped in a pointless existence that ends with death, and unlike Whitman's narrator they are unable to rise above this grim, mundane world or imagine a common link with others or with the past and the future. Rather than simply being tools and machines carrying out routine, white-collar tasks, Whitman's narrator finds the resources within himself to transform an ordinary scene of returning home from work into a sublime spiritual experience, in which he perceives a bond with all of mankind, past, present and future, as well as with nature and the entire universe in a way that Bartleby and his coworkers never could have imagined.
Essay Undergraduate
Story of an Hour
The institution of marriage has historically connected to the pressures of patriarchy. Women were seen as being obligated to marry successful men in order to start families and support working husbands. The Chopin short story "The Story of an Hour" uses the mistaken report of a husband's death and his young wife's apparent joy in order to critique the institution of marriage.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Evangeline a Tale of Acadie
Describe the village of Grand-Pre. What overall impression is given?
Paper Undergraduate
Deliberation of Early Church Leadership Terminology
This paper examines the use of several interchangeable terms in early Christian church leadership. References are made to Scripture to provide evidence that the words were not definitive in meaning, but were instead used to convey the same stewardship and faithful leadership as the Church grew. Of note are Paul's letters to Timothy and Titus in which he explained his concerns about the behavior and trustworthiness of church leaders.
Research Paper Doctorate
Djuna Barnes's Nightwood
¶ … Nightwood by Djuna Barnes [...] justify the book as a postmodern novel. "Nightwood" is a postmodern novel in every respect, from the stream-of-consciousness style of writing to the underlying sexual and homosexual…
Research Paper Doctorate
The right to die: ethical and legal perspectives
Science and technology has allowed humans to treat a myriad of diseases that were previously terminal. This is illustrated in the controversy over the case of Terry Schiavo, the Florida woman at the center of a right to…