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Romance
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Romance as an academic topic appears across a wide range of disciplines, from psychology and sociology to literary studies and cultural history. Students encounter it in courses on personal development, gender studies, and literature, where it serves as a lens for examining human motivation, social expectations, and cultural values. What makes romance academically interesting is its dual nature: it is both a deeply personal experience shaped by individual psychology and a social institution shaped by historical period, gender norms, and cultural context. This tension between the private and the public gives the topic genuine analytical depth.

The papers archived here approach romance from several distinct angles. Literary analysis dominates, with works such as Pride and Prejudice, Cyrano de Bergerac, Their Eyes Were Watching God, and The Last of the Mohicans examined for how they portray love, gender, and desire. Some essays take a psychological perspective, applying frameworks such as major psychological theories to real romantic relationships. Others are historical or cultural in focus, exploring romance in the Middle Ages or in twentieth-century British literature, while still others treat figures like Nora Ephron to analyze how romantic comedy as a genre shapes popular expectations of love.

A strong essay on romance needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a general claim that love is important or complex. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, psychological research, or historical context carries more weight than personal opinion alone. The most common pitfall is treating romance as a single universal experience; the strongest essays acknowledge that ideas about love differ significantly across gender, culture, and historical period, and build their argument around those meaningful differences.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Infancy Colonialism and Post-Colonial (Thwarted)
Are you married Dr. Aziz?" With this innocent question, a tragedy is instigated in a Passage to India. Novelist E.M. Forster shows how the naive and virginal heroine Adele projects her sexual insecurities upon the…
Essay Doctorate
Purple Rose of Cairo Woody Allen\'s Film
Woody Allen's film The Purple Rose of Cairo is a Depression-era story about a lonely, daydreaming woman in New Jersey who she seeks refuge from the doldrums of her life at the movies.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hegel's Dialectic: Life, Death, and Love in Modern Philosophy
Hegelian Dialectic Concerning Life, Death and Love
Paper Undergraduate
Boys Don\'t Cry Movie Review:
Director Kimberly Peirce's "Boys Don't Cry" (1999) starring Hillary Swank as Brandon Teena depicts the life and death of a young woman who believed that she should have been born a man.
Research Paper Masters
Sociological theory and major perspectives
DuBois, in his "The Conservation of the Races" described racial prejudice as "the friction between different groups of people." (Dubois, 12) If one accepts this definition, then the United States contains a great deal…
Research Paper Doctorate
Elizabeth Arden the Founder. Florence
The Founder. Florence Nightingale Graham was born on December 31, 1878 in Woodbridge, Toronto, Canada to William and Susan Graham of Scotland. She was fourth of five children and her mother chose the powerful name for…
Paper Undergraduate
Pride and Prejudice an Analysis
This paper analyzes Mrs. Bennet's relationship with her daughters in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. Mrs. Bennet wants nothing more in life than to see her daughters married off to wealthy men. Her daughters, however, want to marry men they can love and respect. The novel details their struggles in a humorous light.
Paper Doctorate
The Great Gatsby: Marxist, Feminist, and Freudian Analysis
The Great Gatsby is one of the legendary novels written in the history of American literature. The novel intends to shed light on the failure of American dream that poor can attain whatever he wants and emphasizes on the hardships presented by the strong forces of social segregation. In order to understand this novel, there are various theories which tend to be helpful in order to understand various angles of this novel. Some of these theories are Freud's psychoanalytical theory, Marxist theory and Feminist theory. Each theory presents a different lens of looking at the same story and presents an ideology ruled by social factors and individual desires.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethics of therapist-client interpersonal relationships
Countertransference and Professional Misconduct
Essay Doctorate
Thomas Wyatt's "They Flee Me" in Helen Vendler's poetry analysis
Thomas Wyatt's poem "They Flee From Me" is enigmatic in its use of metaphor. This is a five-page essay that thoroughly analyzes and explores this poem in terms of its central meaning and metaphors. Structure, rhyme, and rhythm are discussed briefly. The bulk of the essay is about the content and tone of the poem, which is misogynistic. The speaker has been unlucky in love and his bitterness causes him to harbor misogynistic feelings.