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Portrayal
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Portrayal as an academic topic concerns how subjects — people, groups, institutions, or ideas — are represented across media, literature, and culture. It appears in courses ranging from film studies and literary analysis to sociology, psychology, and cultural studies. What makes it intellectually compelling is the gap between representation and reality: the choices a filmmaker, novelist, or journalist makes when constructing an image of society reveal assumptions about power, identity, and value. Papers in this area often examine how those choices shape public understanding of issues such as family life, religion, mental health, diversity, and social relationships.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Literary analysis essays examine how specific characters are constructed, as in readings of Holden Caulfield or characters from Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, while others focus on authorial perspective, such as Hesse's portrayal of women in Narcissus and Goldmund. Film-focused essays take a cultural or psychological angle, analyzing how movies like Maid in Manhattan or As Good as It Gets represent American family life, religion, or psychopathology. Some papers move into social and political territory, treating media portrayals of real events and figures as evidence of broader cultural attitudes toward race, diversity, and justice.

A strong essay on portrayal grounds its argument in specific textual or visual evidence, moving beyond summary to explain what a representation means and what it reinforces or challenges within its social context. The thesis should take a clear position on what a portrayal accomplishes, not merely describe it. The most common pitfall is treating representation as straightforward reflection rather than as a constructed, selective act shaped by historical and cultural pressures.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Racism, Violence, and Hunger in Richard Wright's Fiction
¶ … Richard Wright's social themes (e.g., racism) in any one of his short stories. Specifically it will discuss "Black Boy," and "Native Son."
Paper Doctorate
Understanding Civil Society Through Legalize Marijuana Organizations
Understanding Civil Society through "Legalize Marijuana" Organizations Collective action groups have garnered considerable interest by social researchers due to the groups' reflection of processes in civil society and unique use of those processes. Researchers have found that a group's framing processes, resource mobilization and political opportunities processes are essential dynamics of the group. Through complex, ideally adaptable and sometimes overlapping processes, these groups are born, flourish, and sometimes necessarily survive internal and external challenges by framing and reframing themselves, mobilizing resources for their survival and their work, and benefitting/suffering from political processes. NORML, the national association devoted to the legalization of marijuana, has successfully followed the necessary steps for effective collective action groups and has consequently adapted, expanded and survived difficulties to achieve some goals and redefine others. As a result of NORML's successful group processes, it is currently a nationally powerful and effective force.
Essay Doctorate
Nurse Jackie and the Politics of Nursing in Media
Nurses are often portrayed according to a very limited range of archetypes. In reality however, the complexity of the profession requires a complex array of personality types. The essay analysis here considers the portrayal of nursing in mass media using Nurse Jackie as a primary subject of analysis.
Research Paper Doctorate
Art and the humanities: scope and significance
Visual Imagery and Qualitative Dimensions of Life & Consciousness in Visual Art
Essay Doctorate
A novel approach to Mrs Dalloway
This paper explores the mental illness of Virginia Woolf. It draws parallels between her condition and that of Septimus Smith, a Character in her novel Mrs. Dalloway. It also briefly looks at the condition known as shell-shock, and the treatments available in the context of the time.
Paper Doctorate
Waters Troubled: The Life of Ida B.
¶ … Waters Troubled: The Life of Ida B. Wells by Linda O. McMurry. Specifically it will contain a critical review of the book. Ida B. Wells was a black activist who came of age after the Civil War in the American South.
Research Paper Doctorate
Teaching Communication Skills for Students With Autism
The conditions for diagnosis for autism that are presently prevalent within the U.S. are those mentioned in the American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistic Manual for Mental Disorders," Fourth Edition,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Tired, nor so Poor in Faith: Jewish
Jewish and Italian Immigration in Early 20th Century America
Research Paper Doctorate
Literary Analysis Author Willa Cather
The author Willa Cather Sibert born on 1873 is an American writer, and one of the country's leading novelists. Here vigilantly skilled prose express dramatic pictures of the American landscape along with those people…
Paper Undergraduate
Spade and Philip Marlowe Comparison Sam Spade
A comparison of the private detectives Sam Spade from Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon and Philip Marlowe from Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep. Analyzed how Spade is a blond satan and how Marlowe is a white knight in a trench coat. Also mentioned how each were portrayed by Humphrey Bogart and if the representation was justified given their contrasting descriptions.