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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
Thomas Carlyle's views on limits of personal liberty in Past and Present
¶ … personal freedom and also the limits of that freedom have been key in Western civilization for centuries. The problems raised were addressed by various writes and ethical theorists, including the political theorists…
Essay Doctorate
Franz Kafka the Trial
Franz Kafka's possibly unfinished novel, "The Trial", is one of the great mysteries of modernist literature. Like most of his works, it expresses his sense of alienation and powerlessness in an increasingly hostile, meaningless, and dehumanized world. Thesis: "The Trial" is a critique of the bureaucratized nature of power in modern society and its effect on the modern individual's will. K.'s attempts to understand the the power structure persecuting him are frustrated because the power structure has no actual meaning or purpose, existing instead for the sole purpose of following is own rules and internal logic.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Dionysian Myth in Two Poems
¶ … Dionysian Myth in Two Poems by Frank O'Hara
Paper Undergraduate
Team Leadership Art and Astronomy
In contemporary life, the values embodied in art are often seen as existing in opposition to science. This sense of opposition seems even harsher when pairing the values of science and religion.
Research Paper Doctorate
Canada's relationship to the United States in Margaret Atwood's Surfacing
For Americans or Europeans who are oblivious to the justifiably pessimistic feelings many Canadians have toward the U.S. In particular and Western attitudes in general, reading Margaret Atwood's book Surfacing should…
Research Paper Doctorate
Mary Shelley\'s Frankenstein Specifically How the Novel
Mary Shelly is known as one of the greatest horror writers of all time, even though it may be more accurate to refer to her writings as introspective social commentary on the human condition and the state of society.
Paper Undergraduate
Buckley, Bruce, Edward J. Hopkins,
Buckley, Bruce, Edward J. Hopkins, & Richard Whitaker. Weather: A Visual Guide. New York:
Paper Undergraduate
Friends of the Fci 2010
My earliest childhood memories unfold in a wave of tastes and smells. My father, an experienced cook, always let me watch him as he prepared dinner or harvested vegetables from our small garden.
Paper Undergraduate
The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling
Wash daily from nose to tail and drink deeply but never too deep
Research Paper Doctorate
Precis on the Book Myth Literature and the African World by Wole Soyinka
The book Myth, Literature, and the African World, was published in 1976, twenty years before the author, Wole Soyinka, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.