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Poetry
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Poetry is one of the oldest and most studied forms of literary expression, making it a central subject in literature courses from introductory composition to advanced seminars. Students are drawn to it because it compresses language into concentrated meaning, requiring close attention to form, voice, tone, and imagery. The range of poets represented in academic writing is wide, spanning figures such as Anne Bradstreet, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Charles Bukowski, Langston Hughes, and N. Scott Momaday, whose theoretical writing on language and imagination extends poetry's relevance into questions of culture and identity. Shelley's "Defence of Poetry" further gives students a critical framework for thinking about what poetry does and why it matters as an art form.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays set poets or individual poems against one another to examine differences in style, theme, or historical context. Biographical analyses, such as those focusing on Paul Laurence Dunbar's life alongside his work, treat a poet's experience as essential context for interpretation. Other papers offer close evaluations of single poems, as with Charles Bukowski's work, while broader argumentative essays address poetry's social and national significance. Some writers approach poetry through adjacent disciplines, incorporating musical or linguistic analysis to enrich their readings.

A strong essay on poetry builds its thesis around a specific, arguable claim rather than a general observation about a poem being meaningful or emotional. Evidence drawn from the text itself — word choice, structure, repetition, and imagery — carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is summarizing what a poem says rather than analyzing how it achieves its effects on the reader.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Walt Whitman and the Poetics
Throughout the course of his poetic career, Walt Whitman strove to attain a poetry that was uniquely American in both its voice and its concerns. To a large extent, it can be said that he accomplished this goal.
Paper Undergraduate
John Donne, Writing Poetry During
John Donne, writing poetry during the early modern period, often combined his imagery and subject matter to focus on devotion in terms of eroticism and divine love. This is indicative of the way in which he considered…
Paper Undergraduate
Becoming American: immigration and national identity
Chitra Bajerjee Divakaruni and Eric Liu are two successful Americans who have mainly three things in common that come to mind at a first glance at their biographies: their nationality (they are both American), their…
Paper Masters
Love Is Not All --
¶ … Love is not all" -- St. Vincent Millay
Paper Undergraduate
Learning Organization the Skokie Library
The Skokie library (Illinois) is special in that it has won several awards including the 2008 National Medal for Museum and Library Service. The library functions on the premise that it is there to assist its users in…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate
Roald Dahl famously complained that the first film version of his seminal work, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was a corruption that neutered the sting of his parable. The book is simply drawn and was intended to be…
Paper Masters
Reaction paper analysis and critical response
¶ … Abortion," Anne Sexton repeats the line, "Somebody who should have been born / is gone." The narrator treats abortion as "loss without death," indicating that an abortion falls into a moral grey area.
Research Paper Doctorate
Gender, Politeness, and Language: Why Women Speak Differently
Gender and its connection with linguistic behavior has been a major subject of debate and discussion in research circles for last many decades. How men and women differ in the speech is an interesting topic that has…
Paper Undergraduate
Harlem Renaissance Poems and Trifles: Literary Analysis
This paper analyses a number of poems that deal with the central theme of prejudice. The poems that are analyzed in terms of certain questions are: "If We Must Die" by McKay; "The Harlem Dancer" by McKay and "The Weary Blues" by Hughes. A play entitled "Trifles "is also discussed in terms of the role of symbolism and the meaning of justice.
Research Paper Doctorate
Italian Renaissance Don\'t Know Where
Italian Renaissance don't know where I got my passion for drawing. It certainly wasn't from my father: he never enjoyed art and thought that artists were only a waste of somebody else's time.