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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Charles Dickens: life, works, and literary impact
¶ … Charles Dickens, "Oliver Twist," "Nicholas Nickleby," and "A Christmas Carol." Specifically, it will discuss the use of prevalent themes throughout the three novels. There are many themes present in these three…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Joan of Arc and Her Story by Regine Pernoud
Pernoud, Regine with Marie-Vbronique Clin. Joan of Arc, Her Story. Revised and translated by Jeremy du Quesnay Adams. Edited by Bonnie Wheeler. New York: Palgrave, 1999. pp336. $11.96.
Research Paper Doctorate
Onetti, Juan Carlos. The Shipyard. Originally Published
The Shipyard tells the story of a man in his fifties whom once worked as an owner of a brothel and now has cultivated the higher aspiration of becoming the owner of a bankrupt, decaying, and rusting shipping company.
Research Paper Doctorate
Pioneers/New Home Compare-Contrast Caroline\'s Kirkland\'s a New
Caroline's Kirkland's A New Home -- Who'll Follow? And James Fenimore Cooper's The Pioneers are novels from the nineteenth century that examine the life of the American frontier. Each author seeks to maintain a…
Paper Undergraduate
Fiction and Non-Fiction in 19th Century England: Example of the Grotesque
One crucial way in which English fiction and English non-fiction prose in the nineteenth century do inform each other is in the development of the grotesque as a rhetorical mode. Although "grotesque" is a somewhat loose…
Research Paper Doctorate
Infidelity within couples: causes, impacts, and relationship dynamics
¶ … reception by the critics. The couples in this novel fear death, and in an attempt to reduce and cover up their fears, they sleep with their married friends, forming a sort of "infidelity cult." "Couples" does not…
Research Paper Doctorate
Nineteenth century literature and critical analysis
¶ … Madame Bovary's entire experience is by way of approaching her own obscurity, and indeed her own demise, and her death as an individual. The essay by Elisabeth Fronfen is, for the most part, very perceptive and the…
Essay Masters
Civilization vs. Wilderness: Prominent Literary Theme
Civilization and the Wilderness -- Early American Literature
Thesis Undergraduate
Literary Analysis of Tolstoy and Kafka
Stories of the absurd are often overlooked for their ability to tell the truth about human nature. We find them comical and strange, but they are so much more than that. Short stories with an edge can carry a lot of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
How Fear Manifests Itself in Two Vastly Different Novels
¶ … Life of a Slave Girl and the Devil in Silver. The paper will point to internal and external fears the protagonists experience in the two novels, and also will report how the protagonists are haunted and how they…