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Personification
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Personification is a literary device in which abstract concepts, objects, or non-human forces are given human qualities, behaviors, or voices. It appears across poetry, drama, prose fiction, and religious texts, making it a central subject in English composition, literary analysis, and rhetoric courses. The device carries genuine intellectual weight because it reveals how writers construct meaning—transforming ideas like death, evil, or justice into tangible presences that readers can engage with emotionally and critically. Works such as Shakespeare's Othello, Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, Frost's "Out Out," and Kinnell's "After Making Love We Hear Footsteps" all use personification to animate themes that would otherwise remain abstract, making them rich sources for academic study.

Student papers on this topic approach personification from several directions. Literary explication essays closely analyze how a single poem or passage deploys the device, as seen in work on Frost and Kinnell. Character-focused essays examine figures like Iago as embodiments of evil, treating a human character as a personified abstraction. Comparative and thematic essays link texts across genres—connecting Morrison, Dunbar, and Miller through shared symbolic language, or tracing the personification of Satan across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Rhetorical analyses, such as those focusing on Selzer's "The Knife," examine how personification functions as a persuasive and artistic strategy.

A strong essay on personification grounds its thesis in specific textual evidence, identifying not just where the device appears but what interpretive work it performs—how it shapes tone, advances theme, or positions the reader. Evidence drawn from close reading of language, imagery, and context carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating personification as mere decoration; the strongest essays argue that it is structurally meaningful, showing how removing it would fundamentally alter a work's effect or argument.

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Paper High School
Hildegard of Bingen Was Many
Hildegard of Bingen was many different things to many different people. She was one of the first women to distinguish themselves within the Catholic Church as someone worthy of the consultation of prominent…
Essay Doctorate
Corporate Social Responsibility Literature Review a Topic-Corporate
This study focuses on corporate social responsibility where companies act beyond the compliance and meeting of legal expectations, but be actively involved in improving the social standards of the stakeholders. This additional commitment through programs that seek to distribute profits equitably so that even the neighborhood of an institution benefit. The literature review provides various dimensions that companies should practice in their CSR programs
Paper Undergraduate
Robert Frost Personification in \"Out,
Personification as the main poetic device in the poem
Essay Doctorate
Character Book Let Great World Spin Ciaran,al
There are numerous ways in which Ciaran's narration serves to close many of the gaps that exist in this novel by Colum McCann. It explains the fact that the city is a character in the story, something that influences all of the narrators and other characters. More importantly, it serves to underscore the notion that Corrigan has many habits that are similar to the people who he aids.
Essay Doctorate
Analysis of two poems with highlighted sections
¶ … Ex-Basketball Player" by John Updike analyzes a former high-school basketball's life after he has graduated and introduced to the "real world." "Ex-Basketball Player" allows the reader to empathize with Flick Webb,…
Paper Doctorate
Structural and thematic correspondences in Genesis, Hesiod, and Ovid
This essay analyzes Genesis, Ovid's Metamorphoses, and Hesiod's Theogony in order to better understand the connections between each text. In particular, each text's description of the primordial chaos before creation, the list of creation events, and gods' relation to these events reveals crucial insights into the limits of human understanding of the universe. These creation myths are attempts to humanize and come to terms with an inhuman universe.
Research Paper Doctorate
Wilde's Dorian Gray and aesthetic philosophy
In Oscar Wilde's novella "The Picture of Dorian Gray," first published in book form in 1891, the main character, being Dorian Gray, described by Lord Henry Wotton as "wonderfully handsome, with...
Research Paper Doctorate
Robert Frost\'s Wind and Window
Robert Frost's "Wind and Window Flower" dramatizes the conflicts between stability and change, between love and death, and between subtle and dramatic strength. Personifying the wind and the window flower, the poet…
Paper Undergraduate
Setting of This Classic Film
The movie, "To Kill a Mockingbird" is nearly fifty years old but it remains a powerful statement on the state of racism in America. This article provides a review of the movie's themes, it characters, plot lines, and symbolism in an attempt to discover why the movie had such impact on society when it was released. The movie, which was released in 1962, still enjoys popularity among movie study classes on the high school and college levels.
Paper Doctorate
Music appreciation: fundamentals and cultural significance
This document contains fifteen different questions and their answers. These questions are on music appreciation. Most of these question are designed to test the authors' listening skills. Some questions asked about specific information on the musical elements and how the piece makes the author feel. All questions have been prepared by focusing on the music industry of America.