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Novels
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Novels are one of the most studied forms of literary art across undergraduate and graduate curricula alike. Courses in world literature, postcolonial studies, American literature, and critical theory regularly assign extended prose fiction as primary texts because novels offer sustained explorations of character, society, and human experience. Works such as To Kill a Mockingbird, Les Misérables, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, and the fiction of Vladimir Sorokin appear frequently in academic writing precisely because they raise questions about identity, family, power, love, and the relationship between storytelling and culture.

Student papers on this subject take a wide range of approaches. Comparative essays are especially common, setting texts against one another to examine shared themes or divergent techniques — pairing works like Snow Country and The Stranger, or The Bluest Eye and When the Legends Die, to illuminate how different authors construct character and society. Other papers focus on a single text through close critical reading, genre analysis of forms like hard-boiled detective fiction, or postcolonial frameworks applied to literature emerging from histories of colonization. Biographical and authorial approaches, as seen in papers on Danielle Steel and Julian Barnes, also appear regularly.

A strong essay on novels begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad plot summary. Evidence should come from specific passages — dialogue, narrative structure, imagery — that directly support the argument about how the writing shapes meaning for the reader. The most common pitfall is treating character analysis as an end in itself; always connect observations about characters back to a larger claim about what the novel reveals.

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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…
Paper High School
Kill a Mockingbird Crime Drama
Crime drama -- novels, television shows, and movies -- have been among the most popular entertainment outlets since the printing press. Early "whodunits" captured the imagination of the human mind since "The Three…
Essay Doctorate
Technologies redefining the notion of literature in hypertext novels and eBooks
¶ … technologies redefining notion literature?
Paper Undergraduate
Victorian novels: Barchester Towers, Great Expectations, and Villette
Great Expectations is a coming of age novel. This novel is a story of Pip and his initial dreams and resulting disappointments that eventually lead him to becoming a genuinely good man.
Research Paper Undergraduate
James Cooper's The last of the Mohicans
Residing in the literary genre of the Romance novel, Cooper's work, the Last of the Mohicans' dominant backdrop is that of an adventure in the wilderness and the historical context of the siege and massacre of Fort…
Paper Doctorate
Farewell to Arms -- Hemingway Hemingway\'s Well-Critiqued
Hemingway's well-critiqued novel, A Farewell to Arms is always a subject of intense literary examination because the structure of the novel has great lessons and examples for the reader and the critic as well.
Paper Doctorate
Victor Hugo Romantic Writings of Victor Hugo
This essay describes the romantic period that Victor Hugo was embroiled in during his lifetime. He was a writer that put emotional and physical turmoil above all else whether the work was a poem, drama or novel. Although Hugo is best known for his two great novels, he was also an accomplished poet and a writer of dramas. The essay details how his work revealed his romantic nature.
Paper Undergraduate
German Literature Scholarship on Yade
This paper examines the existing scholarship concerning German-Turkish authors Yade Kara and Emine Sevgi Ozdamar. The scholarly discourses surrounding the two authors contain a number of similarities; both authors address themes of cultural identity, the picaresque novel, and destabilizing the binary that is often placed separating German and Turkish cultures.
Research Paper Doctorate
Response of housekeeping to organizational change
The novel "Housekeeping" by Marilynne Robinson starts with "My name is Ruth." And concludes with Ruth's comment that she had "never distinguished readily between thinking and dreaming" and with the realization that her…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Language and Simulation in Nabokov's Lolita
Vladimir Nabokov's celebrated novel Lolita is a linguistic masterpiece which ranges its author in the same line with other geniuses, such as James Joyce or Thomas Pynchon. Admittedly, Nabokov's writings are situated on…