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Magazines
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Magazines occupy a distinctive place in both media studies and business curricula, where they serve as a lens for examining advertising, consumer culture, and publishing as an industry. Students encounter magazines as subjects in courses on marketing, communications, gender studies, and entrepreneurship, among others. What makes the topic academically compelling is the way a single magazine issue can reveal the economic logic of a company, the cultural assumptions of its era, and the persuasive strategies used to reach target audiences. Because magazines bridge editorial content and commercial interest, they invite analysis at the intersection of business practice and social influence.

The papers archived under this topic approach magazines from several distinct angles. Some focus on advertising's role in shaping consumer expectations, particularly for women, examining how products are framed through aspirational or unrealistic imagery. Others take a historical approach, investigating what magazines from the late 1940s and 1950s communicated to female readers about social norms and dating. Additional papers engage with advertising creative principles more broadly, treating magazine campaigns as case studies in persuasion and brand strategy. A smaller set of papers uses articles as primary sources for business analysis, reviewing company cases or exploring concepts like electronic commerce and entrepreneurship.

A strong essay on magazines should establish a clear, specific thesis rather than broadly summarizing content. Evidence drawn directly from magazine articles, advertisements, or documented company practices carries more weight than general claims about media. The most common pitfall is treating magazines as a monolithic category — a focused argument distinguishes between publication type, target audience, and historical moment to build a precise and credible analysis.

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Paper Undergraduate
External analysis of Coca-Cola
Coca Cola – External Analysis An external analysis of Coca-Cola (NAICS # 312111 – Soft Drink Manufacturing) requires scrutiny of the specific industry environment with Porter's 5-Forces model and examination of the larger business environment through a PEST analysis. Porter's 5-Forces Model considers the factors of Competitive Rivalry, Threat of New Entrants, Threat of Substitute Products, Bargaining Power of Suppliers, and Bargaining Power of Buyers. A PEST Analysis, which considers factors within the greater business environment, looks at four "sub-environments" of: "Political (including regulatory); Economic; Sociocultural; and Technical." Business scholars offer many sources from which data can be collected in order to examine the dynamic external factors affecting any business, including Coca-Cola.
Essay Undergraduate
Feminist Advocacy of a Social Issue in Contemporary Culture
Although there is not absolute consensus, popular writings about feminism suggest that there have been three waves of feminism: (1) The first wave of feminism is said to have occurred in the 18th through the 20th centuries and was characterized by a focus on suffrage; (2) The decades spanning 1960 to 1990 are said to encompass the second wave of feminism, to which a concern with cultural and legal gender inequality is attributed; and (3) The third wave of feminism began in the early 1990s partly in response to the conservative backlash the second wave engendered, and partly in recognition of the unrealized goals of the second wave of feminism up to that time. This third wave of feminism made salient a more subjective voice that pointed at the intersection of race and gender with greater resolve than would have been possible when civil rights issues garnered the lions' share of public attention.
Thesis Doctorate
19th Century Women\'s Suffrage in Europe
Most countries in Western and Central Europe, including Great Britain granted women the vote right after World War I, and only in the Scandinavian nations of Norway and Finland did they receive it earlier than that. France stood out as exceptional, however, no matter that it was the homeland of democratic revolution and of the idea of equal rights for women. It also had a highly conservative side and did not allow women's suffrage until 1945. In Southern and Eastern Europe, granting the vote to women was usually delayed at least that long as well, especially due to the influence on the Catholic Church. In any event, the authoritarian or even fascist nature of the regimes in most of these countries made voting irrelevant, but for the most part no movements for women's suffrage and equality even existed in these regions in the 19th Century. Women's suffrage advanced fastest in the Northern Protestant European countries that had the strongest liberal and democratic traditions un the 19th Century, particularly Britain and Scandinavia, although almost everywhere, working class and social democratic parties were the first to formally endorse female voting rights.
Paper High School
Borders Visible and Invisible Presentation of 3 Artworks
Art is meant to challenge the viewer and to transgress borders of what is considered real and false. This paper examines the function of art in crossing borders of gender. It examines three artists: Kruger, Manet, and Warhol and compares how the work of the artists transgress sexual barriers and notions of what it means to be a woman in contemporary society.
Thesis High School
Language and sexuality
The broader theoretical treatment of the study of sexuality has long been recognized in the fields of linguistic anthropology and sociolinguistics. Historically, sexuality has been discussed in sociocultural studies of language over the long term. In fact, this work and the research it generated make up the emergent history and the scope of research on language and sexuality. This analytical discourse on the topic of sexuality and language is socially oriented, to be certain, but the it has followed a path of convenience, resulting in piecemeal treatment and an underlying fragmentation of the body of work.
Paper Masters
Italian Americans of the 1930\'s
Italian Americans – 1930s Introduction The American experience for Italian immigrants (with particular emphasis on the 1930s) is the salient topic for this paper. The materials presented from scholarly sources in this paper show the positive and negative impacts experienced by Italian American immigrants; those sources will also be critiqued and analyzed in the context of the experiences, including impacts such as discrimination that Italian Americans went through during the 1930s.
Thesis Doctorate
Healthcare Leadership and Management in Healthcare Effective
This paper addresses a set of questions about nursing and management and leadership by nurse-leaders. Leadership is much like communications in regards to the complexity inherent in these concepts. There are many different perspectives that are used to examine these issues and researchers study leadership and management from such disciplines includes Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Social Psychology, Business, and Sociology.
Essay Doctorate
Boeing Company the Impact of Mission, Vision,
This paper presents an analysis of the Boeing Company using different management tools and techniques. The major sections of the paper include: the impact of mission, vision, and stakeholders on the company's success, SWOT analysis, Michael Porter's Five Forces Model, strategies in the light of SWOT analysis, communication plan, leadership effectiveness, corporate governance mechanisms, and corporate social responsibility efforts.
Thesis High School
Shanghai Disney Resort Marketing Strategies Analysis
This paper presents an analysis of the marketing strategies which the Walt Disney Company has designed for its new mega project – the Shanghai Disney Resort, China. The analysis includes a brief overview of the project, the marketing mix strategies, overall plan, failed and successful market strategy, and a critical review of the marketing strategies. This paper presents an analysis of the marketing strategies which the Walt Disney Company has designed for its new mega project – the Shanghai Disney Resort, China. The analysis includes a brief overview of the project, the marketing mix strategies, overall plan, failed and successful market strategy, and a critical review of the marketing strategies.
Paper Doctorate
Bookselling Industry in Japan Individual Integrative Case
The executive summary provides an overview of japan's book selling industry. The paper contains a background part that indicates the selling channels involved in the industry. It includes a problem statement and an analysis of the problem facing the bookselling industry. It provides recommendations as well as action plans for tackling the problem.