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Pygmalion
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Pygmalion refers primarily to Bernard Shaw's celebrated play, in which the characters Eliza and Higgins drive a story of class, language, and social transformation. The work appears across disciplines including literature, theater studies, and gender studies, making it a recurring subject in humanities courses. Students are drawn to it because it raises enduring questions about power, identity, and what it means to reshape another person's life. Its connections to broader themes — education, femininity, and the tension between love and control — give it a richness that rewards close academic analysis.

The archived papers approach Pygmalion from several distinct angles. Some situate Shaw's play within the context of his other work, such as Major Barbara, treating it as part of a larger dramatic project. Others pursue gender-focused readings, examining how strong female figures like Eliza are depicted alongside comparable characters from plays such as Riders to the Sea. Comparative frameworks also appear, linking Shaw's themes to the aesthetics of Oscar Wilde or to broader currents in mass media and popular culture. A smaller cluster of papers connects the Pygmalion dynamic to real-world contexts like teaching, leadership, and self-esteem, treating the transformation narrative as a lens for understanding mentorship and influence.

A strong essay on Pygmalion builds a focused thesis around one of its core tensions — transformation versus autonomy, class versus identity, or care versus control. Close reading of dialogue and character development carries the most weight as evidence. The most common pitfall is summarizing the plot rather than analyzing what Shaw's choices reveal about his social and philosophical arguments.

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Essay Doctorate
Greek Project 1272 ART204 Formal Research Project
Ancient Greek sculpture is one of the most famous historical forms of art. Three main forms of life are represented by this sculpture; war, mythology, and rulers of the land of ancient Greece. The main aim of the paper is to revisit the history of the art of sculpturing in ancient Greece and different steps of its development within different time periods. Some of the main developments in Greek sculpture included depiction of changes in forms, depiction of female and male figures, degrees of present realism, and how sculpturing was used to achieve these effects.
Paper Undergraduate
Pygmalion One of the Best
One of the best actors to play the role of Professor Henry Higgins would be Clive Owen. Owen is relatively close in age to Kate Winslet, who would play an amazing Eliza Doolittle. Michael Caine could then play Colonel…
Research Paper Doctorate
Eliza Doolittle and Her Problems
At the outset one has to understand that Eliza Doolittle is a character created by George Bernard Shaw, a famous English playwright and to understand her we have to start with Shaw.
Paper Undergraduate
Shaw\'s Pygmalion Q\'s Shaw Claimed
Shaw claimed to be an early feminist, believing women were very much equal to men in terms of cognitive ability and philosophical reasoning. Does this sentiment correspond with what you see in Eliza?
Research Paper Doctorate
Mass Media / Popular Culture
In the Classical Greco-Roman era, it was believed that Pygmalion, a sculptor, brought Galatea to life. However, today it seems to be a more common belief that Galatea creates Pygmalion.
Research Paper Doctorate
Capitalism and Socialism in Shaw's Pygmalion and Major Barbara
Capitalism in Pygmalion and Major Barbara -- Even a socialist Shaw must bend his ideological will to real-world demands
Research Paper Doctorate
Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion: themes and analysis
Jean Reynolds, "A New Speech," from Pygmalion's Wordplay
Paper Undergraduate
Gentility and Class in Fielding's Joseph Andrews
The protagonists of Henry Fielding's novels would appear to be marked by their extreme social mobility: Shamela will manage to marry her master, Booby, and the "foundling" Tom Jones is revealed as the bastard child of a…
Paper Doctorate
please read uploaded PROMPT doc
A postmodern film studies critique of Woody Allen's 1994 film Bullets Over Broadway and David Mamet's 2004 film Spartan. The paper seeks to approach each film in terms of the auteur theory, by noting that each has a writer-director who has scripted a film with a single protagonist. The nature of Allen's identification with his playwright protagonist, and Mamet's identification with his Special Forces op protagonist, is questioned in terms of how each film examines questions of violence and duty. Postmodernism is invoked in the conclusion to show that the modernist desire to insist upon stable meaning can easily be deconstructed: David Mamet's film could be taken as an invitation for military men to place conscience over duty, leading Mamet to a conclusion where his story could be used to justify the actions of someone like Bradley Manning.
Research Paper Doctorate
Classical literature: history, themes, and cultural influence
Aeneas is said to possess spiritual or godlike qualities that make him fit his role as a hero and destined founder of Rome. Critics see this achievement as proceeding both from his destiny and his own actions.