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Religious
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Religion as an academic subject appears across disciplines including theology, sociology, history, cultural studies, and ethics. Courses in these fields ask students to examine how religious belief systems form, how they shape individual identity, and how they interact with political and social structures. The topic is intellectually broad, covering everything from the foundational texts and doctrines of specific traditions to the role religion plays in public life. Papers in this area may address established world religions, newer or syncretic movements such as Peyotism and Mormonism, or the intersection of faith with culture and power, as seen in work examining figures like Leopold Sedar Senghor.

The archived essays approach religion from several distinct angles. Some take a tradition-specific focus, examining the beliefs, history, and practices of a single faith or denomination, including Catholic education and basic theology. Others are comparative or cross-cultural, exploring how different faiths address shared human concerns. Ethical and applied angles appear as well, with papers connecting religious frameworks to biomedical ethics and ethical dilemmas. Some essays are more sociological, analyzing how religion functions within society or manifests in everyday cultural forms, including popular media and ceremonial contexts like weddings.

A strong essay on a religious topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond description toward analysis — explaining why a belief or practice matters, not just what it is. Evidence drawn from primary religious texts, historical context, or documented case studies carries more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is treating religion as a monolithic category; strong papers acknowledge internal diversity within any tradition and avoid overstating uniformity across communities or time periods.

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Paper Undergraduate
Madame Bovary; the Awakening Much
Much has been written about the oppressive situation respectively faced by the protagonist of Flaubert's Madame Bovary and Chopin's The Awakening. Both novels occur at a time in history when women were viewed as little…
Paper Undergraduate
Gary Heidnik and His Death
In Philadelphia, on March 25, 1987, police received a 911 call from a hysterical woman, Josephine Rivera. She claimed she had just escaped from a mad man, and three other women were still being held captive in his house…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Beowulf and The Tale of the Heike: comparative analysis
Comparing and contrasting 'the ideal hero' in "Beowulf and "The Tale of the Heike"
Research Paper Undergraduate
Human trafficking in missionary contexts
In October of 2007, 30 nuns from 26 countries, whose congregations have members in various Asian countries, met in Rome to discuss the trafficking of women and children in India and other parts of Asia.
Essay Doctorate
Anomie and Alienation Lost, With No Possibility
Running through the literature of classical late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century sociology are themes of isolation, of the poverty of life lived in isolated cells, of the fragility of a life in which we can almost never make authentic connections with other people, in which we are lost even to ourselves. We have – and this "we" includes the entire population of the industrialized world, or at least most of it – have raised the act of rationalism to an art form, but along the way we have lost so much of our humanity that we can no longer form or maintain a community. Four of the major social critics of the twentieth century took up these themes for essentially the same reason: To argue that while ailing human society could be transformed in ways that would give it meaning once again. They differ significantly, however, in what the nature of that transformation should and what meaning humans should be intent on seeking.
Paper Doctorate
Carl Rogers and Carl Jung: Pioneers of Modern Psychology
Beyond the contributions of Sigmund Freud, Carl Rogers and Carl Jung may be the two most important individuals in the development of the modern study of psychology. Jung, having studied under Freud, expanded on Freud's…
Paper High School
Religion and Authorship in Bradstreet, Wheatley, and Equiano
Religion in Early American Writers: Bradstreet, Wheatley, And Olaudah Equiano
Research Paper Undergraduate
Corporate Social Responsibility the Good,
Corporations have been blamed for a variety of evils from global warming and the destruction of the rainforest to problems related to gross negligence of funds as well as abuse of employees.
Paper Undergraduate
Nonfiction Is a Particularly Fertile
Nonfiction is a particularly fertile genre of prose for the writer. Not only is copious material available for the focus of such stories, but the author is also free to choose from a great variety of approaches, which…
Paper Undergraduate
Lesbians in U.S. History Sexuality
Sexuality must not be thought of as a kind of a natural given power which tries to hold in check, or as an obscure domain which knowledge tries gradually to uncover. It is the name that can be given to a historical…