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Prose
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Prose is one of the foundational subjects in English studies, encompassing the full range of written language that does not follow a formal metrical structure. Students encounter it across courses in literary analysis, composition theory, grammar, and cultural history, where it serves as both an object of study and a medium of expression. Its academic interest lies in the vast territory it covers — fiction, nonfiction, personal narrative, and formal exposition — and in the way writers manipulate prose style to shape a reader's sense of meaning, voice, and reality. Works such as Nathaniel Hawthorne's fiction, Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, William Byrd's History of the Dividing Line, Wole Soyinka's The Lion and the Jewel, and the experimental writing of Djuna Barnes all appear as touchstones for understanding how prose operates across different traditions and periods.

Student essays on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some pursue close reading and formal analysis, examining how a specific author's writing style generates particular effects on the reader. Others adopt comparative or hybrid angles, exploring the confluence of prose and poetry, or the boundary between fiction and nonfiction in contexts like nineteenth-century England and the grotesque. Historical and cultural approaches examine how prose reflects the lives and nature of the societies that produce it, while grammar-focused essays address the structural mechanics underlying effective writing.

A strong essay on prose begins with a clearly scoped thesis that identifies a specific stylistic, formal, or thematic argument rather than simply describing a work's content. Evidence drawn from close attention to language — sentence rhythm, diction, tone, and structure — carries the most weight. Writers should resist treating prose as a neutral container for ideas; the way something is written is inseparable from what it means, and overlooking that connection is the most common weakness in essays on this subject.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Taoism Bending Towards the Way
Next to Confucianism, the most important philosophy of the Chinese has undoubtedly been that of Taoism." (DeBarry, Chan & Bloom, p.48) Taoism is a more elusive philosophy than the more concrete, ancestor-focused and…
Paper Undergraduate
Journal of Physics and Medicine
¶ … Journal of Physics and Medicine in Biology: Manuscript 653
Paper Doctorate
Room of One\'s Own
¶ … Room of One's Own -- Magical Realism and the Power of Gender
Research Paper Doctorate
Jane Eyre Compare and Contrast With Movie
The novel Jane Eyre was written by Charlotte Bronte in 1847. Although the novel is widely considered a classic, and is therefore presumed to be timeless in terms of its characters and themes, when a contemporary…
Paper Masters
Critical assessment of Andrea Palladio and Sinan's architectural texts
The document compares two architects, Sinan and Palladio. Two writings by each respective architect are examined for similarities and differences, while their lives and work are also discussed briefly. Both show a remarkable reverence for their respective Gods, and both use the art of architecture to solidify this reverence.
Paper Undergraduate
John Milton: life, works, and literary legacy
Human Behavior Explored in the Works of John Milton
Research Paper Undergraduate
Samuel Taylor Coleridge During Samuel
During Samuel Taylor Coleridge's lifetime, the critics were at best dismissive and at worst harsh and cruel. However, as reviewed by scholars in the 20th and 21st centuries, as Suther (1) states, "there seems to be very…
Paper Doctorate
Deviant behavior: definitions, causes, and social implications
, deviance refers to behaviors that are considered wrong or undesirable within a particular cultural context. Deviance is all over society – from the minor etiquette breaches that engender frowns or gossip to behaviors that require legal or psychological interference. However, what seems to be the real essence of deviance is that it elicits somewhat of a varying degree of negative response from a part of the dominant cultural group (audience), which then, in turn, elicits social control from that group to the individual. What is interesting is how much culture causes variation in deviance. Some people regularly deviate and are never punished, other mildly chastised, some given therapy, others are incarcerated. In the examples we review below, we will see that clearly a form of deviance exists – but to what degree, and to what circumstance society has chosen to punish and control are quite difference.
Paper Doctorate
Detailed and comprehensive text analysis
¶ … Fugitive Crosses His Tracks: The harshness of Jante Law
Paper Doctorate
Robert Frost: Life Tragedies and Poetic Parallels
This essay presents a brief biography of the American poet, Robert Frost. It describes his childhood and outlines the long history of tragic losses in his life, such as the loss of two children in infancy, the sudden death of his wife, the loss of another child as a young adult, and of still another child to suicide shortly afterwards. The essay recounts Frost's contempation of suicide revealed much later in his Poem Kitty Hawk, and the parallel in the life of the writer of this essay and the theme of Frost's infamous poem The Road not Taken.