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Lyric
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Lyric, as an academic topic in the arts, refers broadly to a mode of expressive writing or composition characterized by personal voice, musical quality, and concentrated emotional or philosophical content. It appears across disciplines including literary studies, music history, cultural studies, and performance theory. Students encounter lyric as both a formal category — one of the oldest distinctions in poetic tradition — and a living practice that cuts across historical periods and cultural contexts, making it a productive site for close reading, cultural analysis, and interdisciplinary argument.

The papers archived here approach lyric from a wide range of angles. Some focus on individual poets and their works, such as Walt Whitman's "O Captain! My Captain!" or the poetry of Amiri Baraka, using textual analysis to examine voice, form, and meaning. Others situate lyric within broader cultural and musical histories, particularly the African American influence on American popular music, or explore its relationship to religious tradition through works like Dierks Bentley's "Prodigal Son's Prayer" and the Bible. Philosophical treatments also appear, as in comparisons drawn from Plato's Ion and the Republic, which raise questions about the nature and legitimacy of poetic expression.

A strong essay on lyric needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing a poem or song to arguing what its formal choices accomplish or reveal. Evidence drawn from close reading — specific word choices, rhythm, imagery, speaker — carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating lyric as purely autobiographical; effective analysis distinguishes between the speaker constructed in the text and the biographical author.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Carl Orff and his musical contributions
Carl Orff a German composer, was born in Munich, Germany on July 10, 1895. Munich had been the place where Orff grew up and where his life had been shaped. The childhood days of Orff brought him a lot of memories that…
Research Paper Doctorate
Woman Loves Her Father, Every Woman Loves
The Politics and Poetics of Despair in Plath's "Daddy"
Paper Masters
Trayvon Martin and Race
It is without question that race relations and the treatment of minorities, black people in particular, has progressed and advanced significantly over the existence of the United States.
Essay Undergraduate
Parsing and Analyzing of Lyrics
The author of this brief report has been asked to analyze the lyrics of the song Formation by Beyonce, the pop and R&B artist who is widely known to the American public. Rather than just summarize and print out the…
Paper Undergraduate
Problems With Red Light Cameras
"I always feel like somebody's watching me." This isn't just the lyric to a popular 80s song -- it is the reality in New York City at many stoplights. In most cities, suburbs, and towns, if a driver makes a moving…
Paper Undergraduate
Week 4 discussion topics and concepts
Billy Collins' poem is a lyric poem because mainly it expresses highly personal emotions and feelings. Many lyric poems involve musical themes or tones, and in fact in Shakespeare's era the word "lyric" meant that the…
Paper Undergraduate
John Keats: Lyric Poem Compared to Narrative
Common themes in "La Belle Dame sans Merci" and "Ode on a Grecian Urn"
Paper Undergraduate
The old guitarist
Pablo Picasso was born on October 25, 1881 in Malaga, Spain. His father was an art teacher and a painter. Although Pablo Picasso was classically trained, he would come to "break painting out of its mold" throughout his…
Essay Doctorate
Creative Arts in the Schools
¶ … inappropriate given the risks posed by old, small radio parts to small children who might put these unsanitary substances in their mouths or injure themselves on sharp parts. Instead, children can be provided with…
Paper Undergraduate
Dead Body in War Poetry
War is a brutal reality on the face of history. Thousands of lives have been wasted in the name of battles and millions of people were affected by it. Poet is a rather sensitive part of our society and feels the brutality of war more than a normal individual. During World War I, the world went through havoc during which millions of lives were shaken. In this era, a lot of poets also emerged due to the depression the society went through. Some of the noticeable names out of these are Wilfred , Thomas Hardy, Isaac Rosenberg and Rupert Brooke. These poets had a lot of differences in their personalities and writing styles however one thing was rather common: they used soldier's dead body as a symbol of death while describing war. Although they way they used it, was different in its own way but this similarity cannot go unnoticed (Means, 1994).