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Metaphor
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Metaphor is a fundamental concept in language, literature, and rhetoric, studied across disciplines including English composition, linguistics, literary theory, and communication. It describes the way one concept, image, or idea is understood in terms of another, shaping how readers and speakers make meaning. The topic attracts academic attention because metaphor is not simply a decorative device but a structural feature of thought and language. Works like Metaphors We Live By appear among student references, pointing to scholarly interest in how metaphorical concepts organize everyday understanding and perception. Courses in rhetoric, poetry analysis, and critical reading all give students reasons to engage seriously with how metaphor operates at the level of the line, the argument, and the mind.

Student essays on this topic approach metaphor from several directions. Rhetorical analyses examine how figures of speech function in speeches and nonfiction prose, with papers focusing on texts such as Richard Selzer's The Knife and Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream." Literary analyses extend to poetry, Renaissance French verse, and fiction, including science fiction. Some essays take a conceptual angle, exploring systematicity in metaphorical thinking or the relationship between metaphor and meaning. Others apply the lens more broadly, treating addiction, abortion, anthropomorphism, and cultural practices as themselves structured by underlying metaphors.

A strong essay on metaphor establishes a clear, arguable claim about what a specific metaphor does — how it shapes understanding, persuades an audience, or reveals cultural assumptions — rather than simply identifying examples. Evidence drawn from close reading of language carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating metaphor as mere decoration; the strongest essays instead show how metaphorical framing actively constructs meaning and influences how readers interpret a subject.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Entrapment and Epiphany in James Joyce's Fiction
James Joyce's "The Dead" and a Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Research Paper Doctorate
Confusing at First Because There Is No
¶ … confusing at first because there is no mention of a turtle, but the scene needs to be set before the turtle can have a point. The title of the story is good because it talks about the main subject of the story, but…
Research Paper Doctorate
The Iliad
With our observation of God, it can, every now and then, be extremely complicated to understand the proceedings and judgments of the Greek divine beings. In modern times, it is believed that God does not tend to take…
Essay Doctorate
Technology and Film Almost From Its Inception,
Certainly, technology may be many things for society – from the ability to even view motion pictures to enhanced communication and transportation. Technology as a tool, though, propelled us into space, to advances in medicine, communication and transportation that few could have imagined a century ago. However, the manner in which these three films characterize technology moving from heroic to a generalized tool to a totalitarian task-master traces not only the evolution of film, but of the way film is used to explain and express societal pressures.
Research Paper Doctorate
Pseudo events and their role in modern media
In the scientific literature it is difficult to find a useful concept for the news craze. In Media Matters (1994) John Fiske uses the word 'media event'. These kinds of events have their own reality and their own…
Research Paper Doctorate
Hero in Literature and the Hunt Symbolism
Courtly Love and the Many Faces of the Hero
Research Paper Doctorate
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Influence, Friendship, and Creativity
The cliched image of the Romantic poet is of a solitary tortured genius; it is ironic that the work of the poets collectively regarded as the 'Romantic School' is marked by collective and co-operative effort as much as…
Research Paper Doctorate
analyzation of texts
Guilt and its limits as a positive force upon the human condition -- two texts grappling with this central issue, from Nietzsche the Genealogy of Morals and Ecce Homo and the Myth of Psychotherapy: Mental Healing As…
Research Paper Doctorate
thucydides and democracy
Salvaging Democracy consent of the governed) then one is not in a democracy, though democratic elements may exist. America, for example, was founded as a republic and not as a democracy (though with time it has shifted…
Research Paper Doctorate
Darwinian View of Life
¶ … River Out of Eden, by Richard Dawkins. The review provides summaries of the main arguments from each chapter, and a discussion, in particular, of the different thresholds mentioned by Dawkins.