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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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Paper Doctorate
Comparative analysis of literary works sharing thematic elements
James Thurber's "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" (1939) and "The Story of an Hour" (1894) by Kate Chopin depict marriage as a prison for both men and women from which the main characters fantasize about escaping. Louise Mallard is similar to the unnamed narrator in Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" is that they are literally imprisoned in a domestic world from which there is no escape but death or insanity.
Paper Undergraduate
John Woo: filmmaker and career overview
Ng Yu-Sum, as he refers to himself in his book, "John Woo: interviews," is considered unique among directors of action films whether in his native China or in the United States.
Paper Doctorate
Inter-Relations in Manyoshu Poetic Wordplay
Much of the poetry in Manyoshu is characterized by a highly influential form of diction that gives meaning to the interpretation of the theme of love and its loss. The poems within detail the grief and the agony of forsaken love from a retrospective, ghostly perspective. By using careful diction, authors are able to have the form of their poems influence the subject matter.
Research Paper Doctorate
Analysis of T. S. Eliot's The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
Literary modernism at the beginning of the twentieth century is considered to have emerged as a radical brake with tradition in the field of both artistic production and criticism. The brake with tradition presupposed,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Abdellah and Watson Nursing Theories Compared
A profession's base of knowledge is normally expressed in the form of concepts, propositions and theories. As with all areas of study, nursing's theories are composed of concepts and the systematic connection of…
Essay Doctorate
Popular Song Lyrics Poetry Has Its Origin
This paper deals with the question of whether lyrics to popular songs can be poetic. It suggests there is a "law of vagueness" whereby song lyrics are kept vague so that young audiences can identify with whatever is suggested by the emotional undercurrent of the music. It then analyzes the lyrics to two pop songs--Nirvana's 1991 grunge hit "Smells Like Teen Spirit" and Hot Chelle Rae's 2011 anthem "Whatever"--in terms of their poetic content. Kurt Cobain's lyrics are analyzed in depth, in terms of their poetic method. Hot Chelle Rae is shown to be using much of the same material as in the classic Nirvana song, but doing so in a more marketable and less alienated fashion. The conclusion suggests that, if Kurt Cobain had not shot himself in 1994, then Hot Chelle Rae might have driven him to it.
Research Paper Undergraduate
John Keats and his literary legacy
John Keats in his sonnet "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer" celebrates the artistry of the poet and the way the pet can make the individual see even the familiar in a new way. Clearly, such power works even from…
Paper Undergraduate
Experimental Narrative the Lyrical Film
As pointed out in Chapter 21, "Documentary and Experimental Cinema in the Post War Era: 1945 -- Mid -- 1960's," at the end of World War II in 1945, documentary and avant-garde filmmaking "underwent enormous changes…
Essay Doctorate
Socrates and Plato: foundational philosophers of ancient Greece
Greek philosophy held a preeminent place in the middle ages among scholastics like Thomas Aquinas, whose Summa Theologica was an attempt to reconcile faith and reason. The faith aspect was supplied by the Church, but…
Paper High School
Magical Realism in Ana Castillo\'s Novel so Far From God
When looking for the magical realism in Ana Castillo's So Far From God, and for those readers who know her work and her cultural background, one of the ways in which the author employs magical realism is as a skilled…