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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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Essay Doctorate
Gender in Poetry / Literature Lesson Duration
Part of exploring poetry is interpreting it in a meaningful way where students can correlate themes to what they have seen and experienced in the world around them. It is with this rationale that the poetry lesson sequence will focus specifically on gender and gender stereotypes, as this is still a major problem within the modern context. Gender roles are still pervasive in our society, despite hundreds of years of feminist theory and action; "These hidden forces shape us and our world view, often without us being aware that they are doing so" (Bengii 2005 p 13). Thus, this sequence of lesson plans will examine the logistics of poetry in order to cover basic literary necessities like rhyme scheme and use of irony, but will also explore how the status and roles of women have evolved over the centuries through examining poetry, popular culture, and literature.
Paper Undergraduate
Contemporary poem analysis and interpretation
Symbolic Interactionism and the Redefinition of Art and Creativity: Kenneth Goldsmith and Conceptual Poetics
Essay Doctorate
Thomas Wyatt's "They Flee Me" in Helen Vendler's poetry analysis
Thomas Wyatt's poem "They Flee From Me" is enigmatic in its use of metaphor. This is a five-page essay that thoroughly analyzes and explores this poem in terms of its central meaning and metaphors. Structure, rhyme, and rhythm are discussed briefly. The bulk of the essay is about the content and tone of the poem, which is misogynistic. The speaker has been unlucky in love and his bitterness causes him to harbor misogynistic feelings.
Research Paper Doctorate
Cuttings and My Papa\'s Waltz by Theodore Roethke
In the American poet Theodore Roethke's poems "My Papa's Waltz," "Cuttings (Later)," and "Cuttings," ordinary aspects of the domestic environment, like a young child being taught to dance by his father or the routine…
Research Paper Doctorate
Scott Russell Sanders and his literary contributions
Scott Russell Sanders -- a Modern, Midwestern Transcendentalist
Paper Undergraduate
Waste Land the Contrast Between
The contrast between T.S. Eliot's "The Waste Land" and Martin Rowson's comic version of "The Waste Land" is like the contrasting sources of light and power from the sun and the moon.
Paper Doctorate
Emily Dickinson: A View From
Emily Dickinson looked at life with a different pair of eyes than most of us. Even now, her poems are slightly odd, focusing on some unique aspect of a common experience. This ability makes to see things in a different…
Essay Doctorate
External vs. The Internal View in Neo-Confucian
This paper is a look at two Neo-Confucian thinkers and teachers who lived about 250 years apart from each other. The first, Zhu Xi, believed in an external perfection of the individual throught he mediation oof society. Wang Yangming believed that the individual had a perfect true nature and that they needed to tap into that to achieve a true moral sense.
Paper Undergraduate
Copyright law and intellectual property protection
The protection of a person's or an organization's intellectual properties, creative designs, innovative ideas, and original works has always been an important endeavor to ensure that these entities will always be…
Paper Undergraduate
Comparison and contrast in analytical frameworks
African-American Women Literature: Didion and Walker