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Opera
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Opera is a dramatic art form that combines music, theater, and often dance into large-scale staged productions. Students encounter it across courses in music history, performing arts, theater studies, and cultural studies. What makes opera academically compelling is the way it sits at the intersection of multiple disciplines — its development reflects shifts in public taste, patronage, and cultural identity. Works like Rigoletto and Don Giovanni, including its aria "Madamina," offer rich material for analysis, as does the output of celebrated performers such as Luciano Pavarotti, whose career illustrates how opera reaches broad public audiences.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on specific works or composers, examining productions of pieces like Rigoletto or Benjamin Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream through literary and musical analysis. Others investigate the collaborative relationship between opera composers and librettists, treating that creative partnership as central to understanding how operas come to life on stage. Review-based essays draw on live concert and theater attendance, grounding arguments in direct audience experience. A smaller set of papers situates opera within broader cultural contexts, connecting it to institutions and movements in the arts world.

A strong essay on opera benefits from a focused thesis — whether analyzing a single aria, comparing productions, or evaluating a composer's legacy — rather than attempting to survey the entire art form. Evidence drawn from the score, libretto, performance history, or critical reception tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating plot summary as analysis; the goal is always to interpret what musical and dramatic choices mean, not simply describe what happens on stage.

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Paper Undergraduate
Music education and objective measures of effectiveness
By any objective standard, K-12 public school music programs are in trouble. Due to the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act that renewed the Elementary Education Act 1965 under then president George W.
Paper Undergraduate
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Research Paper Undergraduate
Amadeus Mozart: life and musical legacy
Throughout the film "Amadeus," the two characters are consistently shown in opposition to each other - from their music to their demeanor. It is clear to see that culturally and ideally, the men were far different from…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Beethoven Immortally Beloved: The Life
Without qualification, the 19th century German composer Ludwig van Beethoven is called a genius in every textbook and encyclopedia across the world, a true revolutionary and pioneer in the world of music.
Paper Undergraduate
Louis Armstrong: Jazz Great Jazz
Jazz music exists as music inspired by a set of emotions is significant to music because it captures a cultural emotion and mindset like none other. Born from rugged blues music, jazz is a type of music that is very…
Paper Doctorate
Spectacle in French and English theatre during the seventeenth century
Similarities and Differences in Spectacle
Paper Undergraduate
Benjamin Britten: life and musical contributions
This biography of Benjamin Britten provides important dates in the composer's life, a discussion concerning some of his major works and a description of his early and later life. The biography describes how Britten's early studies paid major dividends as he expanded his work to include the theatre and cinema, and discusses his relationship with influential individuals. A summary of the research concludes the biography.
Paper Doctorate
Representation of Women in Jane Eyre, Great
This paper looks at the position of a woman during the Victorian era, their roles and the milestone women have passed to gain their freedoms and independence. The paper explores the readings, Jane Eyre, Great Expectations and The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Other Tales, and explains the portrayal of the women.
Essay Doctorate
Works of Art Speak to Different People
¶ … works of art speak to different people in different ways. Explore and explain which performances and which ideas from the course that you have seen and heard this semester have "spoken" with most impact…how and why?
Research Paper Doctorate
Farewell, My Concubine: Gender, Performance, and Identity
This paper is an analysis of the 1999 Chinese language film Farewell, My Concubine. The film compares the lives of two Chinese opera stars, one of whom plays the male roles, the other of whom impersonates the female roles. The implications of their careers in patriarchal, communist-era China is discussed as well as the notion of gender-as-performance.