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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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Paper Doctorate
Multicultural literature and representation
This study after having examined the work of Dorothy West has been informed and enlightened about the miserable way that human beings, and in this case African American human beings have been historically pushed around by those in the higher socioeconomic classes to do their bidding, just as the little boy in ‘The Penny'. The use of human beings in this manner can be likened to the use of animals in tilling the land or making their last journey to the butcher house to wind up as food on the tables of those wealthier than are they. West did an excellent job
Essay Doctorate
Beautiful Mind a Film
"A Beautiful Mind" – a Film John Forbes Nash, Jr., an American Nobel Prize-winning mathematician, is such a notable individual that he is the subject of a book, a PBS documentary and a film. The film A Beautiful Mind (Crowe, et al. 2006) eliminates certain aspects of Nash's life and rewrites other aspects revealed in the book and documentary, possibly to make Nash a more sympathetic character for the audience. However, the film remains true to a consistent theme: in an individual's quest for satisfaction through self-fulfillment, the abnormal can also be the extraordinary. A Beautiful Mind (Crowe, et al. 2006) portrays an historical individual who: is abnormal in that he is a paranoid schizophrenic; is ambitiously ingenious, in that he obsessively pursued a unique mathematical theory with an exceptionally high intellect in order to be distinguished for his achievement; achieved an extraordinary accomplishment that is acknowledged by a Nobel Prize. As the film illustrates, Nash accomplished his game theory of Economics despite the interaction of his abnormality, determination and brilliance but also due to their interaction. Though the film "sanitizes" Nash by eliminating some unsavory aspects of his life, it gives us a uniquely disturbing taste of mental illness "from the inside out" and takes the audience on a painful, struggling journey to show that in an individual's quest for satisfaction through self-fulfillment, the abnormal can also be the extraordinary.
Paper Undergraduate
Mood Disorders in the Movie Melancholia
Depicting Melancholia in Film: Melancholia
Research Paper Doctorate
Violence on the Web Computer Games
¶ … Violence in Web-Based and Computer Games on Adolescents
Research Paper Doctorate
Maria Edgeworth's Belinda: themes and literary analysis
¶ … feminist implications of Maria Edgeworth's novel, Belinda. In many ways, Edgeworth's Belinda seems to flaunt the 19th century ideas about the proper behavior of women in society.
Research Paper Doctorate
Financial statements overview and analysis
This discussion contains research pertaining to the impact of cash-basis accounting on the distortion of the financial position and operating results of a business.
Paper High School
Mini comic book history and cultural significance
Considering the overwhelming popularity of AMC's The Walking Dead television series, which uses writer Robert Kirkman's and artist Tony Moore's eponymous comic book as its primary source material, I would like to create a parody version to highlight the racial discrepancies in character development found within both the show and the comics. The basic theme of my comic book would be the racial sanitization of mass media marketed primarily to White audiences, and how artists, writers and other creative contributors can subtly alter their work to cast minority characters as insignificant, underdeveloped, or supplementary to the overall narrative. While The Walking Dead TV series and comic books have enjoyed immense success, both with the subgenre of comic book readers and the mass market of major network television, many media critics have noticed a disturbing trend in which African-American characters are relegated to entirely irrelevant positions. This inherent bias may not have been so easily recognized for traditional entertainment sources, which remain primarily steeped in the world of White Americans, but the fact that The Walking Dead is set primarily in Atlanta, Georgia and its rural outskirts, the dearth of African-American characters is alarmingly apparent.
Paper Doctorate
Margaret Atwood\'s Novel \"The Edible
Margaret Atwood's novel "The Edible Woman" was written in the 1960s, a time period when society favored patriarchal attitudes and when it was perfectly normal for men to be dominant members of the social order. It is very likely that she designed this novel in an attempt to raise public awareness concerning the wrongness associated with sticking to traditional gender roles. Atwood practically wrote this text with the purpose to have her readers understand that society had reached a level where it was much more complex than it had been in the past and where people needed to change their attitudes in order to be able to be an active part of the social order.
Research Paper Doctorate
Historical Analysis of Fires of Jubilee by Stephen Oates
¶ … Fires of Jubilee: Nat Turner's Fierce Rebellion," by Stephen B. Oates. Specifically, it will analyze the historical value of the book, and analyze the author's assessment that "His [Nat Turner's] rebellion…
Paper Doctorate
Alfred Hitchcock Is One of the Most
An analysis of the influence of German Expressionism, Soviet Constructivism, and Griersonian Documentary Realism on Alfred Hitchcock's films. Films that were analyzed in these respects are The 39 Steps and The Lady Vanishes. Hitchcock used German Expressionism to determine what was seen on screen, Constructivism to determine how it was seen, and Griersonian Realism to elements the audience could relate to, thus allowing them to engage in the suspense on a personal level.