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Shakespeare
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William Shakespeare stands as one of the most studied figures in academic history, appearing across disciplines from literature and theater studies to history and cultural theory. Students encounter his work in courses on early modern English literature, drama, and Renaissance studies, among others. What makes Shakespeare academically compelling is the sustained interpretive richness of his plays and poetry — works like Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, and Richard II raise enduring questions about character, power, identity, love, and death that reward close critical attention across generations of readers.

Student essays on Shakespeare tend to take several distinct approaches. Close reading and character analysis are common, focusing on figures like Hamlet's indecisiveness or Lady Macbeth's ambition and how these illuminate larger themes. Comparative essays appear frequently, whether contrasting Shakespeare's presentations of the same character or examining adaptations like the 1961 film West Side Story alongside source material. Historical and cultural approaches also surface, including examinations of the Elizabethan stage's exclusion of women performers, festive comedy's Saturnalian patterns, and Shakespeare's treatment of political power in plays like Richard II. Some papers extend outward to film adaptations, such as those featuring Laurence Olivier or the 1971 Macbeth.

A strong essay on Shakespeare begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim about genius or timelessness. Evidence drawn from specific scenes, dialogue, and imagery carries the most weight, especially when supported by attention to genre conventions or historical context. The most common pitfall is summarizing plot instead of analyzing how language, structure, or dramatic choices construct meaning — every claim should circle back to the text itself.

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Essay Doctorate
Shakespeare's Othello as Aristotelian Tragedy: An Analysis
Aristotle, in Poetics, presents certain conditions for a Tragedy to be defined as such. Key conditions hinge primarily on certain elements of plot and secondary on certain components of character. Shakespeare's Othello seems to fulfill most of the conditions with the exception that the plot is more complex and circuitous than that demanded by Aristotle's condition of a unified, taut arraigned whole. Nonetheless, Othello's' drop hinges on a peripety moment. We identify with him for his cause-and -effect action was prompted by error, and this makes shim as human as any of us for we perceive the same results as potentially happening to us. Whilst a tragedy in the modern sense, Othello almost succeeds in being a tragedy in the Aristotelian sense, too.
Research Paper Doctorate
Othello Things Fall Apart
Emilia: the wife of Iago. She provides the handkerchief for her husband, unwittingly facilitating Iago's orchestrated revenge upon Othello. However, she sympathizes with Desdemona, regarding all men as savages.
Paper Undergraduate
Language and Linguistics Can Often
¶ … language and linguistics can often be rather perplexing. The age-old question of what came first, the chicken or the egg? The English language is filled with words and phrases that derived their meanings in less…
Paper Undergraduate
Corruption of power in The Merchant of Venice, The Tempest, and Julius Caesar
Absolute and less-than-absolute power: Both are corrupting forces in Shakespeare
Research Paper Undergraduate
Evolution of English literature from medieval times to the Romantic era
When surveying the chronological evolution of English literature over the centuries, one can readily trace the development of a style that shifts over time from a concern with collective endeavor to increasingly…
Paper Doctorate
Sex, power, and intimacy in human relationships
How does Beyonce's "If I were a Boy," music video illustrate the key concept -- "social origins of desire"?
Thesis Undergraduate
Othello Aristotle\'s Poetics Is the Most Informative
Aristotle's Poetics is the most informative piece of work on the nature of art. It is in the Poetics that Aristotle defines the fundamental nature of tragedy. For Aristotle, what defines tragedy (and all art, in…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Formalist interpretation of dramatic structure and meaning
Tom Stoppard's 'Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead'
Paper High School
Comparison of three themes in The Tempest and Solibo Magnificent
The modern age has been typified by the spread of European culture (eventually largely by way of North American culture) through a series of military, political, and economic conquests of indigenous populations in other…
Paper Undergraduate
Nature of American Views About
This question holds the de-facto assumption that to be 'American' means to be of white European descent. This is a position held not only by racist Tea Partiers hurling out the N-word to members of Congress at the…