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Naturalism
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Naturalism is a literary and artistic movement that emerged from realism, pushing further toward the idea that human lives are shaped by environment, heredity, and social forces beyond individual control. It appears most often in American and European literature courses, where students examine how writers responded to industrialization, poverty, and scientific determinism. The movement invites close attention to questions about free will, class, and survival, making it a rich subject for both historical and theoretical analysis. Works like Stephen Crane's The Red Badge of Courage, Kate Chopin's The Awakening, and John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath appear frequently as primary texts, alongside broader comparisons between realism, naturalism, regionalism, and modernism.

Student essays on this topic take several recognizable approaches. Comparative analysis is common, placing naturalism alongside realism and symbolism through writers such as Flaubert and Dostoyevsky to trace how each movement constructs reality differently. Some papers focus on a single text, using Crane or Steinbeck to ground arguments about determinism and class struggle. Others explore local color and regionalism through works like Garland's Up the Coulee and Frederic's The Damnation of Theron Ware, examining how place shapes character. A smaller number extend into visual art and drama, treating naturalism as a cross-medium aesthetic.

A strong essay on naturalism needs a focused thesis that goes beyond labeling a text naturalistic and instead argues what the movement's conventions reveal about a specific theme or character situation. Evidence drawn from narrative technique, imagery of nature and environment, and social context carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating realism and naturalism without distinguishing their different assumptions about human agency and determinism.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Red Badge of Courage Stephen
Stephen Crane's novel the Red Badge of Courage is an example of literary naturalism, a movement in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century that went beyond realism to delve into the darker side of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Stephen Crane: A Great Writer of American
Stephen Crane: A Great Writer of American Naturalist Fiction and Non-Fiction, and of Local Color
Paper Undergraduate
Naturalism Most Marxian\'s, in Addition
Most Marxian's, in addition to seeing Marxianism as an emancipator social theory, have also seen it as a worldview. Moreover, they have attached considerable importance to it being a coherent and rationally sustainable worldview. As Wilfrid Sellars and Richard Rorty took philosophers to be doing, and legitimately so, Marxians as well want to see how things hang together in the broadest and most inclusive sense of that term. They want to establish, in doing this, that talk of a Spiritual or Supernatural World is nonsense, or at least a mistake, and, as Marx put it grandly, to establish "the truth of this world" (Rorty, 1976). Some of them were what we now call historicists (Gramsci most clearly), but none of them, not even Otto Neurath, were relativists, skeptics, or what some now call postmodernists, who think that there is no truth of this world, or of any world, to be established. They might, if they could have studied Quine and Davidson, and could have read their Putnam and Rorty, have come to be convinced that there is and can be no one uniquely true description of the world.
Paper Undergraduate
Individualism in \"The Notorious Jumping
Individualism in "The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" and "The Awakening"
Research Paper Doctorate
Art history periods and movements
France has been always considered to be cultural centre of Europe; the standards set by French men in art were indisputable and classic. French painters were rather progressive for the nineteenth century epoch, as they…
Thesis Undergraduate
Theoretical Foundations of Nursing: Nursing Can Be
This article examines various theoretical foundations for the nursing profession in light of nursing education, practice, and research. The paper begins by evaluating grand nursing theory, middle range theories, and the future of nursing based on IOM recommendations. This is followed by an analysis of an ethical dilemma scenario, global perspective for a nursing theory, theory integration, a global view, and reflection and assimilation.
Paper Undergraduate
Jekyll and Hyde: A Gothic
Robert Louis Stevenson published his Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in 1886 -- a good century after the first Gothic novel came into being in England. Stevenson's novel was, in a sense, a throwback to the…
Paper Undergraduate
Language, words, and the effects of time
anguage and What it Does Introduction Where are all the humbling, memorable, well-crafted stories about believable characters fighting for hope and survival in our climate-changing, globalized and fragile world? What's happened to the screenwriters who once upon a time craftily juxtaposed compelling characters with down-to-earth and / or tragic Earthly events? Is it now considered passé to employ character-powered narrative that helps the underdog overcome conniving, selfish culprits and extraordinarily complex situations in lusty scenes from today's changing world? When it comes to embracing 2012-style pragmatism – which could and should branch out to naturalism and realism – has quality storytelling disappeared forever from the entertainment genre called film?
Thesis High School
American Revolution
American Revolution's Emphasis On Individual Rights
Paper Undergraduate
Magic and the Supernatural in 1001 Arabian Nights
As Bruno Bettelheim states in The Uses of Enchantment, the fables depicted in Arabian Night are of a specific character that has been shown to be part of the universal nature of stories of enchantment.