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Love
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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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Paper Undergraduate
Stop All the Clocks Poem by Auden
This poem takes grief to another level. The poet uses rhyming couplets to take personal grief into the public realm. The poet uses metaphor, allusion, fictions and makes very good use of them.
Thesis Undergraduate
Who Is Carmilla and Why Is She a Threat to Victorian Age?
Carmilla chooses her victims (young women isolated from society and without friendship) mainly because they are easy prey. She is a sensual, tender and affectionate woman herself -- beautiful to behold, as Laura…
Paper Masters
Historical Impact of Melodrama: Film
In the first half of the 19th century, classical cinema was the norm in the American film industry, and filmmakers had become accustomed to uniform styles for creating visuals and sounds used in making motion pictures.
Thesis Undergraduate
Jane Eyre: The Conflict Between Love and Autonomy
¶ … Charlotte Bronte's novel Jane Eyre, the desire of the protagonist to be loved is overpowered by her desire to be independent and autonomous. The difficulty, of course, is that Jane Eyre is first published in 1847:…
Thesis Undergraduate
Truth About War and Peace
Life's Subjections: Changes To The Ways Of Life Found In Tolstoy's War And Peace
Paper Doctorate
Sports as a Passion
When did it start getting serious for you?
Paper Doctorate
Attribution Example Exercises and Worksheet
Finding and fixing wording and positioning errors in attributions
Essay Doctorate
Gender, Autobiography, and Syphilis in Jane Eyre
¶ … 1847, Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre is structured like a puzzle. The title page reads Jane Eyre: An Autobiography but the work is credited to Currer Bell, an apparently male pseudonym.
Paper Doctorate
Account of Ariel Schrag Reading From Her New Novel
Ariel Schrag is a cartoonist, television writer, and novelist. Schrag is perhaps best known through her television work, on the groundbreaking lesbian-themed Showtime series "The L Word" (for which she wrote over two…
Paper Masters
Death Penalty: Why Its Wrong
It is often suggested that morality comes from a venerated source - from reason, or from God (Wheatley & Haidt, 2005). Judgments on the basis of morals are important, complex, and intuitive.