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Revenge
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Revenge is a compelling subject in academic writing because it sits at the intersection of ethics, psychology, literature, and law. Students encounter it across disciplines — from literature and philosophy courses examining moral justice to criminal law classes analyzing punishment and retribution. What makes revenge intellectually rich is the tension it creates between emotional justification and ethical consequence, between a character's or society's desire for satisfaction and the cost of pursuing it. Works like The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, Shakespeare's Hamlet, Titus Andronicus, The Revenger's Tragedy, and the ancient Greek Oresteia all place revenge at the center of their moral universes, giving students a wide literary tradition to analyze.

The papers archived here approach revenge from several distinct angles. Literary analysis is the most common, with essays examining how specific characters — particularly sons avenging fathers — navigate moral ambiguity, madness, and consequence. Comparative approaches appear frequently, setting texts like Hamlet against The Revenger's Tragedy, or contrasting adaptations of The Count of Monte Cristo. Some essays take an ethical or philosophical angle, asking whether a quest for revenge can ever be morally just. Others draw on religious frameworks or principles of criminal law to evaluate revenge against broader systems of justice.

A strong essay on revenge requires a focused, arguable thesis — not simply that revenge appears in a text, but what the work ultimately claims about its moral or psychological consequences. Literary evidence drawn from character actions, motivation, and outcome tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating revenge as self-evidently wrong or justified without engaging the genuine complexity the source material presents.

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Paper High School
Character analysis in The Scarlet Letter
Hester is the protagonist as well as the victim in The Scarlet Letter. She is a strong woman but she is surrounded by a sense of gloom throughout the novel. Her life is one of suffering and most of the images related to…
Essay Doctorate
Aristotelian elements of tragedy in classical Greek dramas
This paper lists and defines the elements of tragedy according to Aristotle. These elements are then applied individually to three tragedies, Oedipus the King, Antigone, and Medea according to the Aristotelian model.
Research Paper High School
Great Expectations and Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens
Both stories, Great Expectations and Oliver Twist, are one of escape for their characters. For Oliver, it is escape form his starvation and bondage. For Pip is it escape from his poverty and illiteracy. Both escape into another world. The world of an 'upper class'. Each has a huge number of similitudes as they have dissimilarity. Their greatest similarity is that both describe the miseries of the abused orphaned penniless waif growing up in poor surrounding, Oliver more than Pip. The distinction between both is that whilst Oliver is a description and rendering o poverty and the abuse of societal class discrimination at its worst, Great Expectations journey beyond that and has the mature character reflect on his experiences and discover that perhaps the poor man is no worse off – and often indeed better than the wealthy. In great Expectations it is Pip and the convict who turn out to be the heroes, whilst the upper class gentlemen are parodied. Great Expectation is, therefore, a parody on genteel British society. Both books decry the abuse and injustice of a 'civilized' class system, particularly the injustice that is doled to the most vulnerable members of society. Great Expectations, however, goes beyond in questioning whether the wealthy are indeed better characters than the poor,simple and illiterate and it concludes with a determined 'no.'
Paper Undergraduate
Frankenstein One of the Most
One of the most important themes in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is the question of nature vs. nurture, because the reader must determine whether the monster's violent nature is due to an innate violence or because of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Crito Is a Short Dialogue
Crito is a short dialogue written by an ancient Greek philosopher, Plato. The conversation between Socrates and his wealthy friend, Crito, revolved around justice and the suitable reaction to injustice.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The moral dimensions of punishment
Punishment is inherently moral because it is based on assigning a binary value (right/wrong) to a behavior. Morality is therefore embedded into the punishment process, because in the act of punishment the state deems…
Paper Masters
Defining Terrorism
Gray, Jacqueline M. And Margaret A. Wilson. "Understanding the 'War on Terrorism': Responses to 11 September 2001." In Journal of Peace Research, 43:1 (January 2006).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Machiavelli and Thomas Hobbes Influenced
¶ … Machiavelli and Thomas Hobbes influenced the entire direction of political thought within their respective generations. Their influence resulted from political documents that changed the way we view the nature of…
Paper Undergraduate
Wstern Film Motion Picture Directors
Motion picture directors have made numerous Western movies in the second half of the twentieth century until about the 90s when the genre had become a thing of the past among film fans.
Paper Doctorate
Bernice Consistency in the Way Bernice Bobs
Bernice Bobs her Hair is a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald, with a film version made in 1976 by director Joan Micklin Silver. This paper examines both of these works, comparing the endings and determining the meaning that this ending has on the works as a whole. The comparison shows that a high degree of similarity works to preserve meaning in the film.