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Reaction
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What is Reaction?

Reaction as an academic topic appears across English studies whenever students are asked to engage personally and critically with a text, film, artwork, event, or idea. Rather than presenting original research arguments alone, reaction-based writing asks students to record and analyze their own intellectual and emotional responses, making it common in composition courses, humanities surveys, and introductory literature classes. The topic spans an unusually wide range of subjects — from historical documentary and visual art movements like Art Nouveau and the Counter Reformation to philosophy, psychology, and social phenomena — because the underlying task is less about a fixed subject and more about the writer's relationship to it.

The archived papers on this topic reflect that breadth. Some take a personal, reflective approach, responding to documentaries, films, or social experiments such as violating social norms. Others engage analytically with movements like Romanticism and Postmodernism, examining how ideas about nature, the individual, and change resonate with or challenge the writer's existing views. Still others treat reaction as a framework for evaluating specific theories, legislation like the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, or fields like open source software, blending personal perspective with structured critique.

A strong reaction essay anchors the writer's response in specific evidence from the source material rather than vague impressions. The thesis should identify not just what you felt but why — what in the source provoked a shift in thinking or reinforced a prior view. Concrete references to moments, arguments, or images carry far more weight than general summary. The most common pitfall is letting the essay become pure description; the goal is always to analyze the reaction itself, treating your own mind as a subject worth examining critically.

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Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism
Buddhism is a major world religion, which was founded in northeastern India and is based on the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama -- more commonly known as the Buddha, or the Enlightened One.
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The Criminal Mind
There have been many times through history that the population has experienced the wrath of criminals on their daily lives- whether it be on the news, in a magazine or being pick pocketed in the subway, criminal acts…
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Characters\' Struggle With Their Lives
¶ … characters' struggle with their lives in the United States vs. life in The Dominican Republic. The Colon family came from the Dominican Republic, immigrated to the United States, and found it was not a land of…
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Beethoven: life, work, and musical legacy
Romanticism developed as a reaction to the Age of Enlightenment and the rationalism and realism preponderance that dominated that period. In this sense, idealism and imagination, the greater impact of feelings and soul…
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Emergency management frameworks and principles
While analyzing the model it is evident that these practices would have been beneficial during Hurricane Andrew and the September 11 terrorist attacks. One of the main reasons why it would have beneficial is because…
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Kant, Beauty Is the Symbol
Kant, beauty is the symbol of what is morally good. In order to justify his view, Kant appeals to several parallels between morality and aesthetics, i.e. between what is perceived as beautiful and what is moral.
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The science of yeast rising
CHEMISTRY: THE SCIENCE of YEAST as a LEAVENER in BREAD
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Socialization of Grandchildren. Specifically it
¶ … socialization of grandchildren. Specifically it will respond to the article "Socialization of Grandchildren." Largely the family itself transmits traditional family and social values, and socialization skills alter…
Paper Undergraduate
Auditory communication and presence perception
In "Can You Hear Me Now?" Sherry Turkle explores the changing relationships between human beings and technology. Turkle claims that communications technologies have created a "tethered life," because we are perpetually…
Paper High School
Theory, principles, and concepts in academic study
¶ … Psychology offers a vast network of concepts, principles, and theories to explain and describe the mental and behavioral characteristics of an individual or group. It is a science that explores biological,…