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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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Essay Doctorate
Platforms the Development of the GPS System
The development of the GPS system was almost entirely a series of chance events, yet these chance events occurred in a situation and amongst individuals that were able to see them for what they were and combine them…
Research Paper Doctorate
Pride and Prejudice and Jane Eyre: comparative analysis of Gothic elements
Contrast & Comparison of Rochester and Darby
Paper Undergraduate
Social Upheaval in A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
Abstract A Tale of Two Cities is long-lasting evidence to the best, and an intense analysis of the worst of human nature. Charles Dickens set out to make the French Revolution live in the minds and hearts of the reader. Human suffering is not the only problem that faced the French people in the 18th Century. With all the injustices and poverty highlighted, A Tale of two Cities is a journeying of situations that will go on just as long as inequity and violence continue to flourish. However, while the novel is a social critique, it is also an examination of the restraints of human injustice where innocent people are killed and imprisoned. In this regard, this paper highlights social upheaval and restoration of social order during the French and Victorian revolutions as highlighted in A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens.
Essay Doctorate
The Louisiana Purchase and American Territorial Expansion
This paper describes the Louisiana Purchase, and its effects in the short-term for President Jefferson, as well as long-term for the United States. It describes America's relationship with the British and the French, particularly the signing of American war funds to Napoleon Bonaparte and in return doubling the size of the US.
Thesis Undergraduate
Canadian Landscape as Emotional Mirror in Ross and Mitchell
External Reflection of the Internal: The Usage of the Canadian Landscape in as for Me and My House and Who has seen the Wind
Paper Doctorate
Female Figures of the Harlem Renaissance Throughout
Throughout the tumultuous span of America's existence, perhaps no era in our national history has come to define both the promise of freedom and the tortured path taken to its deliverance than the Harlem Renaissance of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Emergence of Colonial Resistance in Things Fall Apart
Chinua Achebe is one of the most influential and powerful writers of today, and he is also one of the most widely published writers today. Chinua Achebe has in fact written more than twenty-one novels, and short…
Research Paper Doctorate
Religious Aspects of the Quiet
Graham Greene published "The Quiet American" in 1955, before the United States was officially involved in the struggle in Vietnam. The book is set in 1952, and it shows Vietnam when the country was still under French…
Research Paper High School
Neon Rain by James Lee Burke Agree or Disagree to Be Hemingway Disciple
In interview, New York Times best-selling novelist James Lee Burke (2002) has been quoted as identifying Ernest Hemingway as among his favorite authors. This is in clear evidence in the first of 19 books which would go…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Response to film Modern Times
¶ … Charlie Chaplin's classic movies was made in the 1930s. It is a film that, like all of Chaplin's films, have a strong social context. Though the protagonist here is a not a tramp, he is the quintessential factory…