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Missionaries
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Missionaries as a subject of academic study sits at the intersection of religious history, colonial studies, anthropology, and ethnic studies. Students encounter this topic in courses ranging from world history and religious studies to postcolonial theory and indigenous studies. What makes it academically compelling is the layered dynamic between Christian evangelism and the political, cultural, and epidemiological forces that accompanied European expansion. The topic demands analysis of power, belief, and identity simultaneously, making it fertile ground for nuanced argument across multiple disciplines.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Historical and regional case studies dominate, examining missionary activity in contexts such as French Canada, colonial Africa, Australia, and the American Southwest, often focusing on specific groups like the Jesuits and their relations with Algonquin communities. Comparative approaches set European Christian objectives against indigenous frameworks of culture and subsistence, including Maori and Aboriginal Australian societies. Other papers take a policy angle, connecting missionary influence to instruments like the Treaty of Waitangi or westward expansion, while some trace longer consequences such as the disruption of indigenous cultures and the spread of disease among native populations during the colonial era.

A strong essay on missionaries establishes a focused geographic and temporal scope rather than treating the subject globally and superficially. Evidence drawn from primary missionary accounts, indigenous oral histories, or documented policy outcomes tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is framing missionaries as uniformly destructive or uniformly benevolent — strong essays hold both the sincere religious motivations and the damaging colonial consequences in productive tension.

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Paper Undergraduate
Colonialism and the African Experience
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Paper Masters
Hawaiian Sovereignty Background- the Newest
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Paper Masters
Rhythm and Blues Artist James
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Paper Undergraduate
Jesuits and Hurons in New
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Research Paper Undergraduate
AME Church Though Not Really
Though not really strictly a black church, the African Methodist Episcopalian Church (or AME church) has had a major leadership position in the black community and has served to empower the people, promote political and…
Paper Doctorate
Macau's 1999 Transfer of Sovereignty to China: A History
Historiography of East Asia: The Transfer of Sovereignty of Macau from the Portuguese Republic to the People's Republic of China on December 20, 1999
Research Paper Undergraduate
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
Things Fall Apart Turning and Turning in the Widening Gyre
Paper Doctorate
Christianity's Failed Mission in 16th–17th Century Japan
¶ … Myths, Missions, and Mistrust: The Fate of Christianity in 16th and 17th Century Japan" by John Nelson looks at the more accepted ideas pertaining to the persecution and demise of Christian/Catholic missions in 16th…
Paper Undergraduate
Chinua Achebe: Literary Genius Chinua
Chinua Achebe is perhaps the most notable African author of the twentieth century. His concepts and ideas reveal an aspect of humanity that cannot be ignored. Achebe always writes with an intense purpose and more often…
Essay Doctorate
Chinese literature and philosophy in Journey to the West
One piece of Chinese literature, generally accepted as one of the four great classic novels in Chinese history, is Wu Cheng'en's Journey to the West. It is the fictionalized story of a real monk who traveled to India to learn about Buddhism and collect sacred Buddhist scriptures. But while China has always been a nation of three great religions: Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism, the author maintains that Buddhism is the superior religion of the three. Journey to the west is not only a fictionalized account of a pilgrimage to obtain Buddhist knowledge, it is also a Buddhist allegory for the search for Enlightenment.