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Mythology
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Mythology sits at the intersection of religion, literature, anthropology, and history, making it a subject that appears across humanities curricula worldwide. Students encounter it in world religions courses, comparative literature classes, and cultural studies programs because myths do more than tell stories — they encode a society's understanding of creation, death, love, and moral order. Traditions ranging from Hindu mythology to ancient Greek religion to early monotheistic systems like those explored through Atonism, Zarathustrism, and Judaism offer rich material for examining how different cultures construct meaning and organize their relationship to the divine and the natural world.

Student papers on this topic tend to take several distinct approaches. Comparative analysis is common, with writers examining how cosmic creation myths function across multiple cultures or setting figures like Apollo and Dionysus against each other to explore contrasting divine values. Character-focused essays trace archetypes such as the trickster or goddesses like Aphrodite through their mythological roles. Other papers narrow to a single tradition, as with Hindu mythology, while some extend mythological frameworks into literary texts, finding mythic patterns in works like Moby Dick or The Joy Luck Club. Feminist readings also appear, interrogating how myths represent gender and power.

A strong essay on mythology requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad summary of stories. Evidence should draw on specific mythological texts, cultural contexts, or theoretical frameworks tied to myth's function — such as how myths address mortality or earth's origins. The most common pitfall is treating myths purely as entertainment rather than analyzing what they reveal about the values, fears, and structures of the culture that produced them.

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Paper Masters
Mentally Ill and Criminal Behavior
Virginia Tech is a prestigious private university on the east coast of America that might forever be associated with the skewed actions of one man. Seung-Hui Cho was a fourth year student at Virginia Tech and was…
Essay Doctorate
Public Education About History Is a Problem
The Vietnam War represented a series of first, all of them seismically changing and affecting the United States in terms of how it wages wars and the outcomes garnered as a result. To be sure, America was wildly…
Paper Doctorate
Application of a Pedagogic Model to the Teaching of Technology to Special Education Students
Almost thirty years ago, the American federal government passed an act mandating the availability of a free and appropriate public education for all handicapped children. In 1990, this act was updated and reformed as…
Research Paper Doctorate
Classic Mythology
Written in the 8th century BC, Hesiod's Theogony provides a detailed and authoritative account of the Greek creation myth and, as such, is regarded as a significant primary source of Greek mythology.
Paper Doctorate
Religions of Rome
Long before the mythological figure of Romulus founded Rome, Rome was already being influenced by other religions, specifically the Greek religion when it was occupied by King Evander.
Paper High School
Analysis of "The Gryphon" short story
Misunderstandings are the essence of tragedy. Nowhere is this true than in the short story Gryphon, in which a fourth-grade teacher gets sick and a substitute teacher, Miss Ferenczi, appears before his class the next day. She is poorly qualified and appears to have psychological disturbances the students recognize quickly, although none of them knows what to do about it. At one point, she recounts seeing a gryphon -- "an animal in a cage, a monster, half bird and half lion" -- while traveling in Egypt. She tells the fourth-graders other wild tales, which only some of them believe. "She lies," says one kid on the school bus afterward. Eventually, after her eccentric behavior reaches a strange climax, one of the fourth-graders tells on Miss Ferenczi to the school principal, and she leaves by noon that day. In this story, Baxter's descriptions of children's collective and individual intelligence are utterly convincing; told through the eyes of a student, the story evokes a childhood experience one is not likely to forget through repeated use of striking animal imagery.
Paper Undergraduate
Realism and Liberalism in Foreign
Since the introduction of realist thought thousands of years ago, the evolution in terms has led to the introduction of neorealism, and scholars who are proponents of this progressive worldview "have generated two theories of foreign policy, offensive and defensive realism, which both start from the assumption that the international system is comprised of unitary, rational states motivated by a desire for security"2 (Rose, 1998, pg. 149). The overriding tendency of states to act in accordance with their own self-interest forms the basis of realist theories of foreign policy, because as history has routinely demonstrated, instances in which an ideal becomes worthy of self-sacrifice are a rare confluence of cultural circumstances, rather than the normative method of governance.
Paper Masters
Greek Mythology and the Human
Ancient Greek mythology is filled with stories of titans, gods, demigods, heroes, and human beings and can provide an insight into how the Ancient Greeks viewed the nature of human existence.
Thesis Undergraduate
Ancient Greek beliefs about the afterlife
The question as to what happens after death is not fathomable within human reason. As such, it remains one of the biggest mysteries of life. The belief in life after death is what keeps the hopes of the human race intact even in the face of the tragedy of death. The concept ‘afterlife' appears absurd in light of rational thought yet strangely familiar. Since time immemorial, numerous theories and beliefs have emerged in bid to work out this disarray. As for Christians, there is a mainstream belief that revolves around Heaven and Hell for rewarding righteousness and punishing evil respectively. In Hinduism, the belief is that upon death, the human soul deserts the body and reincarnates in a different form based on ‘actions and consequences.' In Ancient Greek religion, there was a wide range of beliefs. As it appertains to this study, Ancient Greeks believed in life after death where the soul departed the body and moved into the Underworld. One of these beliefs was in life after death in an alternate universe where souls went for the afterlife. They held on to the faith that death merely marked the end of human life or human and not the existence of the soul. While the Ancient Greeks believed in the existence of the soul after death, they saw the afterlife as one that lacked purpose; according to them, life after death was meaningless.
Essay Doctorate
Hero With 1,000 Faces the Classic Hero
The classic hero seems to teach us the value of humanity, while helping us strive for excellence by understanding the value of the experiences rendered through intuition, emotions, and often feelings that are special to the hero – often rather than logical reasoning. The paradigm of heroism transcends genre, chronology and has become so common in the human collective consciousness that it is easily recognized and repeated.