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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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Paper Doctorate
Anti-War Sentiments Vonnegut and Sassoon -- Anti-War
This paper looks at the writings of novelist Kurt Vonnegut and poet Sigfried Sassoon and examines their anti-war sentiments as expressed in their works. Each author was involved in a war and each expressed his anti-war feelings differently. This paper explores how each author felt about war, why he felt that way, and how he used his writings to tell the world about these feelings.
Research Paper Doctorate
Hughes Beckett Hughes and Beckett
Hughes and Beckett -- making and failing to make a new mythology in a world vacant of belief
Research Paper Doctorate
William Blake: Life, Poetry, and Prophetic Vision
William Blake was born in London in 1757, the son of a hosier. He attended a drawing school and was subsequently apprenticed to an engraver from 1772-9, before attending the Royal Academy as a student from 1779 to 1780.
Paper Undergraduate
Humor as Rhetoric in Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography
When deciding to write an argument, one has a myriad of rhetorical strategies from which to choose in order to make that argument more forceful. Some of these strategies include calling upon a high ethos, or…
Paper Undergraduate
Big Aims it Has Been
It has been said that brevity is the soul of wit. One might also make a case that less is more when dealing with topics less than humorous. Unfortunately, however, in the modern and postmodern literary landscapes, many…
Research Paper Doctorate
John 13: 1-17 Synthetic Observations
John 13: 1-17 is presented in allegorical prose; the passage reads like an excerpt out of a story.
Research Paper Doctorate
Understanding dance cultures and their social significance
¶ … Gerald Jonas' text Dancing -- the Pleasure, Power, and Art of Movement attempts the difficult feat of conveying "The power of dance," a kinesthetic practice, into prose. Perhaps this is why the book was originally…
Research Paper Doctorate
Robert Frost: The Telephone Frost
Frost was very unlike many of the 'modernist' poets of his time. His poetry was not overtly concerned with larger philosophical issues and visions of society. His work was essentially closer to nature and to the heart…
Research Paper Doctorate
Analytic Comparison of Gone With the Wind and the Wind Done Gone
Sun Trust Bank vs. Houghton Mifflin Company
Research Paper Doctorate
Once more to the lake by E.B. White
¶ … Lake," is an oddity, a piece of spiritual writing that seems to be reflective of, particularly, traditional Christianity along Catholic/Episcopalian lines. And yet, unlike those branches -- or any branches -- of…