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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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Paper Undergraduate
Mary Pickford: United Artist\'s Founder,
Mary Pickford: United Artist's Founder, America's Sweetheart
Paper Undergraduate
Psychoanalytical Reading of the Turn
Sigmund Freud's theories of psychoanalysis - in particular, the concept of repression -- have been liberally applied to interpretations of Henry James' novella, the Turn of the Screw.
Paper Doctorate
Nature in Troilus and Cressida Both Troilus
Both Troilus and Cressida and The Winter's Tale deal with nature as an allegory for human nature. Many kinds of metaphors are used, from the classically romantic, to the dirty joke, to positive and negative portrayals…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Britten\'s Midsummer\'s Night Midsummer Night\'s
Benjamin Britten got the plot for this opera from Shakespeare's play by the same name. In 1960 he, along with his companion, Peter Pears, presented it as a showpiece for his friends and for a wide variety of talents.
Essay Doctorate
Shakespeare\'s Richard II Careful Analysis of John
Careful analysis of John Locke's Two Treatises of Government reveals the author's fairly rigid attitude towards the constitution, right and responsibilities of a political state. When applying Locke's well defined…
Paper Undergraduate
Comparative analysis of Antigone, Gilgamesh, and Merchant of Venice
It has been said that life is a tragedy for those who fell, and a comedy for those who think. The truth of this statement is a matter of some debate, but it was never meant to be taken completely literally.
Paper Undergraduate
Allegory and social portrayal in Alice in Wonderland and A Midsummer Night's Dream
Allegory as a Device in the Work of Shakespeare and Carroll
Paper Masters
William Shakespeare\'s Henriad and Orson
Rewriting the role of Falstaff in the Shakespearean English history cycle
Paper Undergraduate
Macbeth Annotated Bibliography
Overview of Macbeth." EXPLORING Shakespeare. Online ed. Detroit: Gale, 2003. Student Resource Center - Gold. Thomson Gale. SMITHSON VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL. 1 Nov. 2007
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare\'s Sonnets 71 and 73
In both Sonnet 71 and in Sonnet 73, the narrator contemplates old age and death. Both poems use rich and dark imagery to convey the theme of human mortality, although Sonnet 73 is more filled with metaphor than 71.