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Short Story
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The short story is a compact narrative form that challenges writers to develop character, conflict, and theme within tight constraints. It appears across literature courses at every level, from introductory composition to upper-division seminars in American, world, and postcolonial fiction. What makes the form academically rich is precisely its economy: every detail carries weight, and the relationship between what is said and what is withheld becomes a central critical concern. Works by authors such as Oscar Wilde, Katherine Anne Porter, Alice Munro, Nadine Gordimer, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, John Edgar Wideman, Alice Walker, and Eudora Welty appear frequently in course curricula, giving students access to a wide range of voices, cultures, and historical moments within a single manageable text.

Student essays on short fiction tend to take several distinct approaches. Character analysis is common, examining how figures like the narrator, a woman protagonist, or a child reveal broader truths about family, society, and identity. Comparative essays set stories or mixed genres against one another — pairing short fiction with poetry, for instance, or contrasting two characters across a single narrative. Other papers pursue historical and cultural context, treating the story as a window into race, gender, or community. Close reading and authorial-intent essays round out the range, focusing on a writer's craft choices and stated influences.

A strong short story essay anchors its thesis in specific textual evidence — dialogue, imagery, narrative point of view, and structure — rather than broad plot summary. The most persuasive arguments show how formal choices produce meaning, connecting craft to themes like death, home, or social belonging. The most common pitfall is treating the narrator as identical to the author; keeping that distinction clear sharpens analysis considerably.

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Paper Doctorate
Frost, Hughes, Alexie the Meaning of \"Home\"
This paper analyzes the theme of "home" in Robert Frost's "Death of the Hired Hand," Langston Hughes' "Ballad of the Landlord," and Sherman Alexie's "What You Pawn I Will Redeem." Home carries a certain connotation in each story that links it to the notion of fraternal charity. In other words, home is more than just a "place"--it is a state of being.
Paper Doctorate
Loss (Read P. 305) Leaving
The idea of loss can be handled differently according to the perspective. It can make one dwell forever, or allow one to move on easier. Don Quixote and Candide are both tales that have lived despite the passage of time. They both contain lessons that can still apply today and use satire as its preferred way of expression.
Paper Doctorate
Argumentative writing: structure, techniques, and applications
Character is one of the driving forces behind great literature. To the extent that a writer can create "real" fictional characters, characters who are both compelling and honest, characters who personify the human…
Paper Doctorate
Kipling Rudyard Kipling\'s Mary Postgate Is Set
Rudyard Kipling's "Mary Postgate" is set during World War I, at a time when British social hierarchies were at their peak in the wake of the Victorian Era and at the dawn of a new world order.
Research Paper Doctorate
Our Guys by Bernard Lefkowitz
Response to Part III ("All American Guys") of Our Guys by Bernard Lefkowitz
Paper Doctorate
Symbolism Plays a Major Role in Chitra
This is a three page literature paper written in five-paragraph essay format. It is about three short stories, two of which are actually chapters in a larger book. The three stories are Banerjee's "Clothes," which is part of "Arranged Marriage; Colette's "The Hand," and Ralph Ellison's "Battle Royal," which is a chapter in "The Invisible Man." Analysis is in-depth and uses ample quotes and examples from each story.
Paper Doctorate
Coming of Age in Oates' "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?"
Joyce Carol Oates's short story "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" was first published in the literary journal Epoch in 1966. The story is about beginnings and the rites of passage.
Essay Doctorate
Maladies, Tracking Treatment Theme (2) Lahiri\'s Stories.
Children play a highly integral role in the fiction of Jhumpa Lahiri's Interpreter of Maladies. In fact, children primarily serve as a physical reminder of turbulence within the romantic relationships that are found in the couple in A Temporary Matter and Interpreter of Maladies. A deconstruction of these two tales proves this fact.
Paper Masters
Masque of the Red Death
Edgar Allan Poe's the Masque of the Red Death is a short story written in 1842 that tells the tale of a wealthy nobleman, Prospero, who seals himself up inside his castellated abbey in order to avoid a great plague…
Paper Undergraduate
Lorrie Moore\'s, \"How\" We Live
We live in a very subjective world. Our very realities can be challenged with just words and, as any good police novel will tell you, witnesses are unreliable because everyone sees things differently.