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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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Andre Lorde \"Beams\" Explication in Audres Poem
In Audres poem "Beams" she suggests that the process of aging and the loss of the vigor youth is something that cannot be halted. The poem expresses the sadness and loss of innocence that results from the perception of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Silhouette of America\'s Dream: Negro
Introduction report in the Norfolk Journal and Guide in 1917 paints a picture of racial harmony in Tidewater, Virginia, that would almost make one wonder why there needed to be Negro League Baseball.
Research Paper Doctorate
Transformational Learning Theory in the Context of Adult Learning
More than twenty-five years ago, Jack Mezirow initiated a profound movement in the field of adult education, that of transformative learning theory. Since this time, the concept of transformative learning has been a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Dickinson I Felt a Funeral in My
Filled with words and phrases laden with imagery of death, drowning, and droning drums, Emily Dickinson's haunting poem "I Felt a Funeral in My Brain" provides insight into a fractured mind.
Paper Doctorate
Passivity and the Divine in Richard Crashaw's Teresa Poems
An examination of two of the poems of Richard Crashaw is presented. The author's view of Saint Teresa and her ecstasy as emblematic of the need to adopt a feminine passivity in the quest for divine love or a true understanding of the experience of divine love forms the central thesis of the examination. Heavy use of sexual imagery in the poems helps to make this point.
Essay Masters
Psychology - Developmental Glass Ceiling the Term
The term glass ceiling is most frequently applied in business circumstances in which women feel, either correctly or not, that men are deeply established in the upper ranks of power, and women, try as they might, find…
Paper Undergraduate
The strangeness of nature in three American poets
Three American Poets – The Strangeness of Nature Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening – Robert Frost Robert Frost's poem – an iconic and very well known poem – can be misunderstood, and is misunderstood in many instances. This is because there is a seeming innocence about the poem. What could be confusing about a poem that seems so tranquil and so linked to the natural world in wintertime? A careful examination of the second stanza can discover there is more meaning than immediately meets the eye, however. "My little horse must think it queer / To stop without a farmhouse near / Between the woods and frozen lake / The darkest evening of the year." The poet stops on the "…darkest evening of the year" to watch the woods "fill up with snow," and according to John T. Ogilvie's scholarship, the poet is caught between two worlds, the world of quiet nature and solitude, and the world of "…people and social obligations" (Ogilvie, 1959). Does the lure of his social responsibility have more power than his attraction to the woods? Ironically the world of the woods and snow may be the poet's escape from the village and the society, but a man owns these woods so he isn't really escaping at all.
Paper Doctorate
Impressions of War the Most
War has affected everyone in different ways. Literature does a great job in portraying all the different perspectives of war. World War I, World War II, and the Holocaust were each tragic in their own way, and short stories, memoirs, and poems manage to catch the pain associated with each of these events.
Research Paper Doctorate
Critical thinking and writing skills
Anyone who has ever suffered through a long and unwieldy document, such as a poorly written 19th century novel or a contract defining a real estate transaction in legal language, or even hearing a loved one defend…
Paper Doctorate
The minister's black veil by Nathaniel Hawthorne
¶ … MINISTER'S BLACK VEIL" BY NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE