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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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William Shakespeare\'s Othello That Support the View
¶ … William Shakespeare's Othello that support the view that Iago, the chief antagonist and primary arch-villain of the play, has been imbued with and personifies a supernatural malevolence to fuel his hatred of the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Reeve and Landor Writers Who
Writers who place their tales in exotic locations may have visited those locations or they may be imagining them on the basis of an image they have of the site. They may also derive what they believe about distant…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Messages of Romeo and Juliet
¶ … Messages of Romeo and Juliet Withstand the Test of Time
Research Paper Undergraduate
Summer Night Dream the Relationship
The relationship between Theseus and Hippolyta seems throughout the play to be the solid and stable, a true instrument of orientation for other mortal couple, notably Hermia and Lysander.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ancient Greek Literature
The objective of this paper is to illustrate the relationship between ancient Greek burial or death rites, and ancient Greek literature. It has 6 sources.
Research Paper Doctorate
Book of Revelation: Looking Beyond
Book of Revelation: Looking Beyond Revelation is could easily be considered the most controversial book in the New Testament; if not the entire Bible itself. Many have tried in vain to understand what the book is trying…
Research Paper Doctorate
Gay Marriage (Pro) Gay Marriage
Gay marriage is a very controversial subject today. Canada and many European nations have already legalized gay marriages. Massachusetts has also legalized gay marriages, though there the weddings do not have the full…
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare's Hamlet
When the Renaissance brought about a rebirth of many of the philosophies and customs of antiquity, it resurrected the ancient stoical idea that by mediation upon death one might be able to come to terms with it and pass…
Paper Masters
Henry James's The turn of the screw: analysis and themes
In speaking of ghost stories, one may say that while there's something rotten in the state of Denmark, there's something really rotten in the House of Bly. That is to say, The Turn of the Screw by Henry James is chock-full with moral depravity and psychological terror, so much so that it gives even the greatest ghost story of all time a run for its money. But what makes The Turn of the Screw such a tour de force is not the fact that like Shakespeare's rendering of Denmark in Hamlet, the House of Bly is "an unweeded garden" of "things rank and gross in nature," but that unlike Hamlet the source for that moral depravity and psychological terror is a complete mystery (Shakespeare). It is the purpose of this essay to examine who is to blame for all the misery and terror in The Turn of the Screw.
Research Paper Undergraduate
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Laertes, Ophelia, 'Modernity' and the "Self"-Evident within Shakespeare's Hamlet