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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
People You Meet in Heaven
¶ … People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom
Research Paper Undergraduate
Flannery O\'Connor and the Nature
The southern American writer Flannery O'Connor was born on March 25, 1925. She was Edward and Regina O'Connor's only child. Her father would pass away when she was only fifteen from lupus, the same disease that would…
Paper Undergraduate
Faulkner's Light in August: themes and analysis
¶ … Nature of Man Explored in William Faulkner's Light in August
Paper Undergraduate
William Faulkner and John Steinbeck,
¶ … William Faulkner and John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway was a member of what Gertrude Stein termed "the lost generation" -- disillusioned, young men returning from World War I. Pulled out of a 1900s United States…
Research Paper Doctorate
English literature: overview and key concepts
Family is a central issue in many novels, and so the separation from the family or the loss of the family can also become a focus. This is the case for the novels Lives of the Saints by Nino Ricci and My Name is…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Shirley Jackson Is the Kind
Shirley Jackson is the kind of writer that demonstrates a reflection of what she saw around her in her fiction. To some degree, Jackson's most well-known and widely read work, the short story the Lottery has eclipsed…
Paper Undergraduate
Pamuk's Snow and Gordimer's July's People
¶ … real-time moments when it is being made, can seem plodding and pedantic as easily as it can seem earth-shatteringly significant. Because the functioning of the body, the ruminations of the mind, and interactions…
Paper Undergraduate
Wright\'s Black Boy: A Journey
Wright's Black Boy: A Journey of Growth and a Search for Self through the Salvation of Art
Paper Doctorate
Deviant behavior: definitions, causes, and social implications
, deviance refers to behaviors that are considered wrong or undesirable within a particular cultural context. Deviance is all over society – from the minor etiquette breaches that engender frowns or gossip to behaviors that require legal or psychological interference. However, what seems to be the real essence of deviance is that it elicits somewhat of a varying degree of negative response from a part of the dominant cultural group (audience), which then, in turn, elicits social control from that group to the individual. What is interesting is how much culture causes variation in deviance. Some people regularly deviate and are never punished, other mildly chastised, some given therapy, others are incarcerated. In the examples we review below, we will see that clearly a form of deviance exists – but to what degree, and to what circumstance society has chosen to punish and control are quite difference.
Paper Undergraduate
Absalom, Absalom and All the King's Men as subversive male historical narratives
"Absalom! Absalom!" Carries the theme of the Old Testament story where Absalom, David, Solomon, God, the entire narrative, in fact, is patriarchal; not a woman appears on the scene.