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Persuasion
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Persuasion is the study of how individuals and institutions influence beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors through communication. It appears across disciplines including English literature, communication studies, psychology, and business, making it one of the most cross-curricular topics in academic writing. In literary contexts, Jane Austen's novel Persuasion serves as a central text, inviting analysis of social influence, gender, and personal agency in Regency-era England. In social science and communication courses, persuasion is examined as a psychological and rhetorical phenomenon, with frameworks such as the Elaboration Likelihood Model providing structured ways to understand how audiences process arguments and change their minds.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Literary analysis papers examine Austen's Persuasion through feminist and cultural lenses, exploring how characters navigate social pressure and personal conviction. Other papers focus on applied persuasion, analyzing real-world cases such as same-sex marriage debates, homeschooling advocacy, or intercultural management contexts where undesirable influence tactics come into play. Media analysis and communication-focused essays examine how persuasive messaging functions across different channels and audiences, while leadership papers consider the role of influence in organizational settings.

A strong essay on persuasion requires a clearly scoped thesis that identifies a specific mechanism, context, or text rather than treating persuasion as a general concept. Evidence drawn from rhetorical analysis, psychological models, or close reading of a primary text carries the most weight, depending on the disciplinary angle. The most common pitfall is conflating persuasion with manipulation without distinguishing the ethical and strategic differences between the two, a distinction that strengthens any argument considerably.

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Paper Doctorate
Ethical persuasion: principles and applications
Ethical persuasion is the best way a speaker can use to ensure that the audience been addressed does not retaliate later. This order analyses ethical and unethical persuasion methods. Using the text provided the order provides the writers view in regards to the text and provides reasons and examples based on the text.
Paper Doctorate
Organizational theory concepts and frameworks
This paper covers 8 critical questions related to organizational theory, design, strategy, and technological change. It explores differences in quantum and incremental technological change as well as ways that organizations can employ key strategies to develop a competitive edge and leverage power structures to advance the organization. Organizational change - evolutionary and revolutionary - are also discussed.
Paper Undergraduate
Corporate Governance, Marketing, and Consumer Behavior Models
The paper introduces the two definitions of corporate governance followed by the OECD corporate governance principles focusing on the external control of the corporations. It then focuses primarily on the marketing changes and how the consumer has become the focal point for all marketing strategies. It thus discusses consumer behavior models.
Paper Undergraduate
Annotated lesson plan design and implementation
This paper designs a complete, detailed, general education SDAIE or Sheltered English lesson plan based on the approach described in the course Writing Effective Lesson Plan textbook in a content area of the subject of history based on both the California English Language Art Standards and English Language Development standards, as well as my specific content area standards (when applicable).
Essay Doctorate
Kuhn's account of rationality in scientific revolutions
The paper will contend that scientific revolutions are irrational because science is irrational. As will be demonstrated by Kuhn and other authors, there is no specific logic as to why some theories and paradigms become popular and other do not. To paraphrase Kuhn, often whoever presented the better argument rather than whoever had the superior argument was the one that became popular and supported. In addition, Kuhn sums up the nature of scientific theories, popular or not, in that all scientific theories are empirically successful, but ultimately proven false. Thus, the nature of scientific theory is irrational and the rise of popular theories is irrational. How would scientific revolutions not be irrational also? The paper supports and proposes that Kuhn's views are that scientific revolutions are partially irrational in nature; they are necessary to scientific developments; and scientific revolutions like all revolutions, have political, economic, and cultural implications. Change and revolution are radical and often spring from emotional, psychological or ethical conflicts of interest; when it comes to human emotions, psychology, and ethics, rationality often takes a backseat to irrationality. The paper supplies Kuhn's reasons to think that shifts in scientific revolutions are not wholly rational and that Kuhn's reasoning effectively demonstrates that shifts in scientific thought violate codes of rationality.
Paper Doctorate
Exotism in 19th and Early 20th Century Opera
This paper will use three examples of 19th and 20th century opera to examine and interpret the term "exoticism." The paper will take time to clarify the relativity of the term exoticism and how it manifests in these three works. What is exoticism and how does it work? What is the function of exoticism in culture, in art, and in general? What does it reflect about a culture and what desires does exoticism express? The paper will attempt to ask and answer more questions utilizing Madame Butterfly, Carmen, and Aida as examples of the exotic at work in art.
Paper Doctorate
persuasion managmement
When making a presentation or a speech to a n audience, there are bound to be different types of audiences since not any two presentations will have the same type of audiences. By knowing the type of audience that one…
Paper Undergraduate
Bringing a WNBA Team to Oakland CA
Business Plan for Oakland's Women Basketball Team
Paper Masters
Patrick Henry's speech and rhetorical impact
Slavery had existed for a very long time. It is still existent; however, the form may have changed. Anti slave laws and abolitionist movement had been there in the past to stop slave trade in Africa. Provisions had been there but there has been no significant impact. This report focuses on Henry's speech in which he has argued how the masters (British) used to control their slaves (American colony). Henry holds the view that British should be thrown away from their executive power and Americans should fight for their freedom.
Research Paper Doctorate
Behavior Modification and Skill Enhancement for High-Risk
Community colleges traditionally maintain an open-door policy, often enrolling students who are poorly prepared to enter higher education.