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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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Paper Masters
Edward Said's critique of women in Kipling's Kim
The purpose of the present paper is to discuss one aspect from Rudyard Kipling's book "Kim," namely the statement made by critic Edward Said according to which "all women are debased or unsuitable for male attention."…
Paper Undergraduate
Nature Poetry Is How Some
Poetry is how some authors express their feelings about a subject or attitude that is occurring around them. The poems by Robert Frost that have been studied all discuss how man and nature are separate from one another.
Paper Undergraduate
Is Branding Still Relevant? Strategies for the Digital Age
Principles of Traditional Branding Strategies - Introduction
Research Paper Undergraduate
Water as a central motif in Haroun and the Sea of Stories
¶ … Salmon Rushdie's Haroun and the Sea of Stories, a famous storyteller Rashid Khalifa loses his gift of telling tales after his wife leaves him for a man who hates stories. His son Haroun goes to the Ocean of Stories…
Paper Masters
Knowledge-Creating Company Analysis and Implications
Analysis and Implications of Concepts from the Knowledge Creating Company by Ikurjiro Nonaka
Paper Undergraduate
Violence in sports: causes, consequences, and prevention
¶ … social history, one of the most often neglected activities that has helped shape the American Experience has been the way in which sports and sporting events have evolved in American popular culture.
Paper Doctorate
The impact of military deployments on child well-being and family violence
¶ … Brats: Military Deployments in the War on Terror
Essay Doctorate
Pat Mora -- \"Curandera\" and \"Immigrants\" --
Latino Spirituality Paper The two poems by Pat Mora – "Curandera" and "Immigrants" – are quite different and yet they both express the what it's like to be Latina and they detail experiences that are unique to Latinas in America. "Curandera": A curandera is a woman of Latina ethnicity who practices folk medicine. In the poem, the curandera has bonded and her life has progressed with and is dependent upon nature – the desert – even though she lost her husband. Her craft is about healing, and the relationship to nature is powerfully presented around the theme of healing with folk medicine. "Her days are slow, days of grinding dried snake into power, of crushing wild bees to mix with white wine." This could be suggesting monotony because she does the same thing every day, grinding and crushing, using the available resources of nature to help people heal. But the coyote and owl, too, do the same thing every day, so it is not monotony, but rather the music of nature and the song of the desert. Ironically the desert is thought of as barren and desolate, but the curandera uses the resources there and she breathes in sync with the mice, the snakes, and the wind. Not only does she survive in the desert, she thrives, and gives life to others.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Plant relocation case study and analysis
Business and Political Argument Against Outsourcing - Plant Relocation
Paper Undergraduate
Jack and the Beanstalk Coming
Coming of Age in a Fairytale: The Dilemma of Jack and the Beanstalk