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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 Masters
The Tragedy of Othello: Passion, Deception, and Self-Destruction
"James Joyce, in a Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man… defines the material of tragedy as 'whatever is grave and constant in human sufferings'," (Campbell, 1991, p. 50). It is the humanity of tragedy which luridly…
Paper Undergraduate
Controlling Images: Representations of Women
Women have been portrayed in various ways throughout time. How race, class, and gender stereotypes impact the representation of women is a very important consideration, and it has changed over the course of history.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hamlet Act 1 -- Hamlet
How do you learn in the first scene that something is wrong in Denmark?
Research Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Ignorance of Stalin\'s Crimes
The history of the Soviet Union represents one of the most controversial aspects of the history of the world. Its turbulent past as well as its complex leaders led Russia to be considered one of the strangest and yet…
Paper Masters
Satire in the writings of Voltaire and Hogarth
¶ … satire in the writings of Voltaire and the etchings of Hogarth. Voltaire (1694-1778) was a philosopher, critic, writer, and one of the leading intellectual figures of the French Enlightenment.
Paper High School
Fitzgerald\'s Novel the Great Gatsby.
¶ … Fitzgerald's novel "The great Gatsby." The main theme that will be analyzed is represented by infidelity and its consequences. The main male character is Jay Gatsby, a wealthy man with a mysterious past.
Paper Undergraduate
Rape of Nanking\" and \"The
The Rape of Nanking and the Holocaust in Europe are two if the greatest atrocities of the twentieth century. Though both of these events resulted in mass extermination of hundreds of thousands of people they had very…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Video games and child aggression: a research overview
Video Games, Violence, Aggression and Exhaustion: The Making of a Violent Child
Paper Undergraduate
Frankenstein an Analysis of Mary
Mary Shelly Wrote the novel Frankenstein in the year 1817. Since its publication it has gripped the interest and imagination of readers throughout the world and is still being read and studied today.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Speeches Given by President George
¶ … speeches given by President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Specifically, it will compare and contrast the speeches and their points-of-view.