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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
Politics, Violence, Language: Political Plays of Harold Pinter
This is a proposal for a PhD dissertation on the works of Harold Pinter. The dissertation will focus on Pinter's late political work, with a specific emphasis on seven plays written between the 1980s and the early 2000s. The proposal offers some specific detail about different approaches to contextualizing Pinter's politics, including a use of Pinter's own political writings, situating him with his theatrical contemporaries, situating him in the larger political landscape of post-fascist Europe and Britain in the later 20th century, and examining the political and aesthetic implications of various other work by Pinter (including his work as a stage director).
Paper High School
Historical figures and their significance
¶ … history are dotted by many instantly and universally-recognizable names. What is it that makes one an enduring symbol beyond death? From those few great men and women granted the sort of immortality that comes only…
Research Paper Doctorate
History of magnetic resonance imaging
Getting an MRI scan may someday become as common as getting an X-ray. - Davis Meltzer, 1987
Research Paper Doctorate
Fateless: a novel of Holocaust survival and identity
Svenska Akademien informs the public in its press release from the 10th of October, 2002, that "The Nobel Prize in Literature for 2002 is awarded to the Hungarian writer Imre Kertesz "for writing that upholds the…
Research Paper Doctorate
The Tin Drum
¶ … Tin Drum concentrates on the prime character of the book named Oskar. This paper explains the psyche behind Oskar's thinking and why he had become the sort of person he was. This paper primarily emphasizes on the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Robert Frost: life, work, and literary legacy
Robert Frost wrote, "I have written to keep the over curious out of the secret places in my mind both in my verse and in my letters." In a poem, he wrote, "I have been one acquainted with the night." Those unfamiliar…
Paper Undergraduate
Milton Friedman's Economic Thought: Free Markets & Monetarism
Friedman is considered to be one of the more influential thinkers of his time and "Milton Friedman on Economics: Selected Papers," is a collection of much of his work. Many of the enclosed papers were originally…
Essay Doctorate
Watson\'s the Double Helix and the Discovery of DNA Structure
The fact that James Watson and Francis Crick were able to discover the structure of DNA is, in retrospect, somewhat shocking. By the early 1950s, it had become clear that the riddle of DNA's structure would be solved…
Paper High School
Application of Game Theory in Various Aspects of Human Life
The earliest conceptualization of game theory is by Cournot in 1838 where the analysis sought to clarify choices and actions taken in a duopolistic market[footnoteRef:1]. Over the years, exploration of the game theory…
Research Paper High School
Relationship Between Unemployment, Labor Market and Microeconomics
There is a level of unemployment in any economy, which is not automatically a bad thing, as most people would think. The presence of a level of unemployment, which usually is presented as a percentage, indicates that at…