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Nobel Prize
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The Nobel Prize represents one of the most recognized forms of intellectual and creative achievement in the world, making it a compelling subject across disciplines including history, literature, political science, and the social sciences. Students encounter this topic in courses that examine global culture, scientific progress, and the politics of recognition. What makes it academically interesting is the range of questions it raises: Who gets recognized, and why? How do prize committees define excellence across literature, science, and social activism? Works and figures such as Gabriel García Márquez, Rabindranath Tagore, Rigoberta Menchú, and Wole Soyinka appear in student writing precisely because their Nobel recognition invites deeper analysis of their contributions and the broader world contexts that shaped them.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Literary analysis is common, with essays examining novels like One Hundred Years of Solitude or plays like The Lion and the Jewel in terms of theme, style, and cultural significance. Historical and biographical approaches also appear, including reviews of works connected to figures like Tagore and profiles of scientists such as Egas Moniz. Some papers use the prize as a lens for exploring broader social questions around gender, society, and individual achievement in America and beyond.

A strong essay on this topic benefits from a focused thesis that goes beyond simply summarizing an laureate's achievements. The most convincing arguments connect a specific work, discovery, or figure to larger historical or cultural forces. Evidence drawn from primary texts, historical context, or close reading carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating the prize itself as proof of importance rather than as a starting point for genuine critical inquiry.

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Paper Undergraduate
Ezra Pound and the Noh
In the West, the Japanese Noh play is most often studied by students of drama, poetry and literature to understand its effects on poet W.B. Yeats (Teele 1957, p. 346). Early in the process, students undoubtedly become…
Paper Doctorate
Gender, Power, and Social Theory: Functionalism vs. Conflict Perspectives
¶ … culture contributed to the void in power between men and women? From a functionalist perspective, how is this a positive thing (hint: look at Talcott Parsons)? How does a conflict theorist look at this gap?
Essay Doctorate
Race and Gender in Gordimer's and Walker's Short Stories
An analysis of racial issues in Nadine Gordimer's "Country Lovers" and Alice Walker's "The Welcome Table." Racial divides prove to be universal and a global problem. furthermore, Gordimer and Walker focus on how racism affects females and the lengths that white people go to in order to make these women feel and appear inferior.
Paper Undergraduate
Thomas Kuhn\'s Theory of Scientific
Thomas Kuhn's philosophy of scientific revolutions has become a natural part of today's scientific jargon. Although many are familiar with its basic tenets, many do not realize that they are part of the formal theory…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Discovery of X-Rays: Roentgen, History, and Medical Impact
rays were discovered in 1895 by W.C. Roentgen who "noticed a barium platinocyanide screen fluorescing in his laboratory as he generated cathode rays in a Crookes tube." (Assmus) This was the beginning of a discovery…
Essay Doctorate
Ethics Awareness Inventory the Individual Ethics Awareness
This paper discusses an individual's ethical inventory analysis. In this particular scenario, the individual's CORE score was character 9, obligation 4, results -4, and equity -9. After looking at the individual analysis, the paper explains the components of the CORE analysis. It also examines how education and work experience have contributed to the individual's ethical perspective.
Paper Doctorate
Tuberculosis: epidemiology, transmission, and clinical management
Tuberculosis (TB) is a communicable disease that is caused by bacteria known as Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It was first discovered in 1882 by a German physician named Robert Koch who received the Nobel Prize for this…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Niels Bohr Niels Henrik David
Niels Henrik David Bohr was a prominent 20th century physicist, known widely for the discovery of quantum theory and generally for the physics of the microcosm (Thomsen, 1986). Bohr was born in Copenhagen on October 7,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Global commerce and human rights
Corporate Responsibility in a Global Marketplace
Paper Undergraduate
Ernest Hemingway: Imitations and Departures
Ernest Heminway was born on July 21st, 1899 in Oak Park, Chicago. As a child, he spent his winters in the city-where his mother took him to operas, art galleries and plays -- and his summers at his grandfather's cabin…