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Romanticism
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Romanticism is a broad cultural and literary movement that emerged as a reaction against rationalism and industrialization, emphasizing emotion, imagination, nature, and individual experience. Students write about it across courses in English literature, art history, comparative literature, and cultural studies. Its appeal in academic settings stems from the way it reshaped how writers and thinkers understood the relationship between the human mind and the natural world, between society and the self. Works by figures such as Edgar Allan Poe, Emily Dickinson, John Keats, Alexandre Dumas, Edmund Spenser, and Jean Jacques Rousseau all surface as touchstones for understanding how Romantic ideals expressed themselves across different national traditions and genres.

The papers written on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays frequently place Romanticism alongside adjacent movements such as Realism and Transcendentalism to trace how these schools of thought influenced and pushed back against one another. Author-focused studies examine individual writers like Poe, Dickinson, and Keats to analyze how Romantic principles appear at the level of imagery, theme, and form. Historical surveys treat the Romantic period as a response to specific social and intellectual conditions of the nineteenth century, while some essays extend Romantic themes into later works such as Cormac McCarthy's fiction.

A strong essay on Romanticism needs a focused thesis that connects a specific formal or thematic element — such as nature imagery, the limits of reason, or the tension between reality and idealism — to a concrete argument about meaning or cultural significance. Textual evidence drawn from close reading carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating Romanticism as a vague mood rather than a historically situated set of ideas with identifiable conventions and contradictions.

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Paper Undergraduate
Frontier Myth the E-Frontier \"The
"The national story and eternal destiny is to struggle with, ad ultimately conquer, the frontier," (McLure 468). The Wild West has long been a romanticized part of our imaginations.
Research Paper Doctorate
Stephen Crane: A Great Writer of American
Stephen Crane: A Great Writer of American Naturalist Fiction and Non-Fiction, and of Local Color
Research Paper Undergraduate
Nature Observed in Warton\'s \"The
Nature Observed in Warton's "The Enthusiast: or, the Lover of Nature" and "Ode to Evening."
Research Paper Doctorate
Feminist principles and the gothic in Wollstonecraft and Austen
Gothic Feminism in Wollstoncraft and Austen
Paper Doctorate
Warholrothko Andy Warhol\'s Iconic Images of American
This paper compares and contrasts Andy Warhol's "100 Cans" (1962) with Mark Rothco's "Untitled 1953" by a preset format assigned in the class. The outcome is that these two paintings have very little in common except for their scale, beyond being approachable to most individuals if those audiences are ready to understand the pieces. Warhol's mass appeal has become a cultural cliché over the fifty years since "100 Cans" but this was not always the case; in fact when Warhol painted the piece, advertising for national brands was at a vulnerable low. Rothko on the other hand, although many disparage abstract expressionism as enigmatic, actually intended to make art that was accessible to all regardless of language or nationality. This is ironic because Rothko ended up getting co-opted into the modernist elite mainstream even though abstract expressionism was considered by most unacessible and avant-garde.
Research Paper Doctorate
Walt Whitman: The First Modern
Following the American Civil War, the poetry of the United States showed signs of becoming much more distinctly American, in style, theme, and content, as the new nation slowly found its own identity, confidence, and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
EE Cummings: Satire and Romanticisim
Born in Cambridge Massachusetts, E.E Cummings had always been encouraged by his parents to explore and develop his creative talents. After acquiring a BA degree from Harvard in English, he volunteered to become an…
Paper Undergraduate
Madame Bovary: A Woman Who
A woman who had laid on herself such sacrifices could well allow herself certain whims. She bought a Gothic prie-dieu, and in a month spent fourteen francs on lemons for polishing her nails; she wrote to Rouen for a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Avant-Garde Become the New Establishment?
The avant-garde of English literature - that is, 20th century English literature; is indeed the "establishment." Having become the establishment by virtue of the very nature of what is defined as avant-garde, then 20th…
Paper Undergraduate
Great Gatsby the Moral Wasteland
The moral wasteland depicted in the Great Gatsby stems from the decadence of a generation of people that are submerged in a pool of greed with a limitless supply of things that bring them pleasure.