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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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Essay Doctorate
How a Secretary Learns S/M
The protagonist in "Secretary," Lee (played by Maggie Gyllenhaal), goes from recently having been released from a mental institution, to learning how to type, to a job with an odd, controlling lawyer, to being his…
Essay Doctorate
Short Story About High School
Sierra was one of those girls everyone hated and everyone secretly wanted to be except me. I just hated her.
Essay Doctorate
Men Undressed: Success of an Anthology
One of the most intriguing aspects of reading this anthology was how sex offered up these writers a more compelling platform upon which to write as sex is a topic which almost always grabs the attention of the reader,…
Essay Masters
Two Minimalist Short Stories
Minimalism certainly means using fewer words to express thoughts, plots, ideas, quotes and action, but there is more to it than that, according to John Barth. By using Henry James' mantra of "show, don't tell," Barth…
Paper Undergraduate
Extend the Lines, if Necessary, Without Being
¶ … extend the lines, if necessary, without being wordy.
Paper Undergraduate
Aeschylus - The Oresteia (Agamemnon, Libation Bearers
Aeschylus - the Oresteia (Agamemnon, Libation Bearers and Eumenides)
Paper Doctorate
Striving Perfection. Must to Err Is Human.
Humanity is forever mired in flaw; to be human is to make mistakes. This relatively simple notion is presented rather dramatically in Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story The Birthmark. A close examination of the language, symbolism, plot and theme of this tale reveal that mankind is steeped in flaws, and to expect perfection out of it is a flaw itself.
Research Paper Doctorate
Cooperative Learning and Class Size: Impact on Student Achievement
¶ … Size/Cooperative Learning & it's effects on participation
Research Paper Doctorate
Philip Glass biography
Philip Glass is certainly the world's finest identified living serious composer owing to vast amounts of American recording contracts. He has a readily exclusive, if ever controversial, style that is both imitated and…
Paper High School
Analysis of "The Gryphon" short story
Misunderstandings are the essence of tragedy. Nowhere is this true than in the short story Gryphon, in which a fourth-grade teacher gets sick and a substitute teacher, Miss Ferenczi, appears before his class the next day. She is poorly qualified and appears to have psychological disturbances the students recognize quickly, although none of them knows what to do about it. At one point, she recounts seeing a gryphon -- "an animal in a cage, a monster, half bird and half lion" -- while traveling in Egypt. She tells the fourth-graders other wild tales, which only some of them believe. "She lies," says one kid on the school bus afterward. Eventually, after her eccentric behavior reaches a strange climax, one of the fourth-graders tells on Miss Ferenczi to the school principal, and she leaves by noon that day. In this story, Baxter's descriptions of children's collective and individual intelligence are utterly convincing; told through the eyes of a student, the story evokes a childhood experience one is not likely to forget through repeated use of striking animal imagery.