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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 Doctorate
Comparative analysis of two Peter Lovesey novels
Mystery novels have a habit of portraying murder as a discrete affair for the middle class. Nowhere is this more apparent than in English mystery novels, as novel writers in England, being a literate caste, usually…
Paper Undergraduate
Compare and Contrast Babbitt With the Handmaid\'s Tale
At first reading, Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis and Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale seem to have little to do with each other except for the very general fact that both novels have elements of social and political…
Research Paper Doctorate
Art and the humanities: scope and significance
Visual Imagery and Qualitative Dimensions of Life & Consciousness in Visual Art
Thesis Masters
Regionalism in the Film Snow Falling on Cedars
The paper is an analysis of regionalism in the novel and film Snow Falling on Cedars. The paper defines regionalism and explains how and where it manifests in the narrative. The paper traces the social context and symbolism within the narrative as a way to elucidate how regionalism is a thematic presence.
Paper Undergraduate
Geography of Martial Arts
This is a "textbook" type of paper that presents the geography of martial arts. For every martial art, where are they originally from, where are they practiced (% in each country), where they most popular, where are there more practitioners, more women, more children. It is an overview, a map, of what is practiced where, why and how and by whom.
Research Paper Doctorate
Big Black Good Man
Richard Wright was one of the most controversial writers of his time. He wrote about life as an African-American Man. In many cases he sought to teach white America a lesson about blacks through his novels and short…
Paper Doctorate
Book review of book listed below
¶ … Coldest War: A Memoir of Korea, a novel written by James Brady. This paper clearly outlines the summary of the book and highlights some of the events written by the author in his book.
Research Paper Doctorate
Literature review and analysis
Only Michener could so exquisitely bring the violent, exciting history of the attractive Caribbean to life. Swaying away from the European Courts of the 15th century that first claimed the area, to the Islands…
Research Paper Doctorate
Allegory and Idealism in Michael Crichton\'s Jurassic
Allegory and Idealism in Michael Crichton's Jurassic Park And The Lost World
Research Paper Doctorate
Tired, nor so Poor in Faith: Jewish
Jewish and Italian Immigration in Early 20th Century America