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Poetic
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Poetry as an academic subject appears across disciplines including literature, rhetoric, film studies, religious studies, and the humanities broadly. Students write about poetic form, language, and meaning in courses ranging from introductory composition to advanced literary analysis. What makes the subject academically rich is the way it connects formal elements — structure, imagery, and voice — to larger questions about nature, life, and human experience. Papers in this area often engage with specific works and authors, including Victor Hugo, Edgar Allan Poe, and Walt Whitman, examining how poetic choices reflect historical moments, cultural values, and philosophical concepts.

The papers archived here approach poetic subjects from several distinct angles. Literary analysis dominates, with essays examining individual poems and their themes, such as Poe's treatment of loss in "Annabel Lee" or Whitman's response to the Civil War. Thematic and historical approaches also appear, including explorations of feminine writers in America before 1865 and the relationship between poetic expression and concepts like courtly love or divine light. Some papers extend into adjacent fields, connecting poetic language to rhetoric, religious practice, or even the terminology of film and television production.

A strong essay on a poetic topic begins with a focused, arguable thesis about how specific formal or thematic choices produce meaning — not simply what a poem says, but how and why it says it. Evidence drawn from close reading of the text itself carries the most weight, supported where appropriate by historical or cultural context. The most common pitfall is summarizing content rather than analyzing craft, so writers should stay anchored to specific language and form throughout.

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Essay Doctorate
Questions About Shinto Beliefs
¶ … creation myth in the Shinto religion is a beautiful and poetic. The gods in the story appear out of nowhere and form the foundations of life. The story portrays Japan as the first land to be created.
Thesis Undergraduate
Problem With Modern Curricular Philosophy
History Of Theory Behind Curriculum Development
Paper Doctorate
Exploring Desire and Morality in Nietzsche's Twilight of the Idols
Nietzsche mischaracterizes the Christian tradition when he states that "the Church fights passion by cutting it out." The Catholic Church has never dogmatically opposed passion, but it has opposed sin.
Essay Doctorate
What Is the Market-State?
Both Phillip Bobbit and Richard Robison offer accounts of what a market-state is. Bobbit contends that the core features of the market-state are a crisis of the nation-state, a transformation of core state functions,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Grandmaster Flash: The Hip-Hop Pioneer
¶ … Fortune Affect Grand Master Flash's Political Message?
Thesis Undergraduate
Inclusive leadership: principles and organizational impact
Role of Inclusive Leadership in Strengthening the Organizational Culture among a Diverse Global Group of Employees
Essay Doctorate
The Pantoum Form in Diaz and Trethewey's Poems
The poetic form of the pantoum is prevalent and makes up the structure of the following two poems: My Brother at 3 A.M. By Natalie Diaz and Incident by Natasha Trethewey. Each poet is able to use the pantoum distinctly…
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…
Paper Doctorate
Film Noir Movement by Examining Two Films
¶ … film noir movement by examining two films from the genre made at two different times within the movement. This will first mean looking at definitions of what classifies a film as noir and then looking at conventions…
Paper Doctorate
Road Not Taken by Robert
The paper provides an analysis of the poem, The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost. A thematic analysis was conducted, focusing on the theme of natural realism as the prevalent theme of the poem. Natural realism was considered the primary theme because of the unassuming, practical tone that the Voice of the poem assumed as he talked about a critical decision he made in his life--that is, taking the road not taken by others.