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Slavery
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Slavery stands as one of the most consequential and morally urgent subjects in historical study, examined across courses in American history, African American studies, literature, and political economy. Its reach extends far beyond a single era or region, touching the foundations of American political, economic, and social development, as well as shaping Caribbean societies and African communities affected by the transatlantic trade. Works such as John Hope Franklin's From Slavery to Freedom, Frederick Douglass's and Harriet Jacobs's autobiographies, Booker T. Washington's Up from Slavery, and Solomon Northup's Twelve Years a Slave appear frequently as primary and secondary sources because they ground abstract historical forces in lived experience.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on personal narratives, comparing the autobiographies of Douglass and Jacobs to analyze how race and gender shaped individual experience under the institution. Others pursue regional or thematic angles, examining slavery in the South, in the Caribbean, or on Virginia's Eastern Shore. Literary analyses connect slavery to works by Phillis Wheatley and even to Gothic fiction such as Poe's The Black Cat. Additional papers address specific populations — children in slavery, women's gendered experiences — or trace the transatlantic slave trade's economic and cultural consequences across Africa and the Americas.

A strong essay on slavery defines a clear, focused argument rather than surveying the institution broadly. Evidence drawn from primary sources — slave narratives, legal records, economic data — carries particular weight and lends credibility to historical claims. The most common pitfall is treating slavery as a monolithic experience; acknowledging variation by region, gender, legal status, and time period produces a more accurate and persuasive analysis.

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Paper Doctorate
Leon Litwack's arguments on slavery and emancipation
Leon Litwack's article examines how it was not until Union military forces entered into Southern territory and began to physically free the blacks that they felt themselves truly free. From the time when Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation to the capture of the Confederate capital of Richmond and the official surrender of the South soon after, the newly won freedom of the former slaves was often very much in doubt.
Research Paper Doctorate
Sex Body and Identity
From birth, humans learn, act out and experience their gendered identities. The society's concepts of femininity and masculinity form a person's relationship to his/her body and the bodies of other individuals.
Research Paper Doctorate
Afrikaner identity and history
Afrikaners are the descendants of the European, mainly Dutch, settlers who first established permanent settlement at the Southern tip of the African continent in the mid-seventeenth century and later spread inland.
Paper Undergraduate
Conventionalist Ethics: Relativism and Subjectivism
I am an ethical relativist with a subjectivist orientation. This no doubt comes from my location in a postmodern, diverse society, where many different people hold many different values, depending on their upbringing.
Paper Doctorate
Code of Hammurabi: research and textual analysis
Hammurabi, the king of Babylonia in the eighteenth century B.C., developed an extensive legal system that came to be known as the Code of Hammurabi. The code covered topics such as military service, family life, and…
Essay Doctorate
U.S. Civil War the American Civil War
The American Civil War is the bloodiest conflict that the United States has ever been involved in. The conflict between the Union and the Confederacy lasted from 1861 until 1865. The conflict between the Union and the…
Essay Doctorate
The Louisiana Purchase and American Territorial Expansion
This paper describes the Louisiana Purchase, and its effects in the short-term for President Jefferson, as well as long-term for the United States. It describes America's relationship with the British and the French, particularly the signing of American war funds to Napoleon Bonaparte and in return doubling the size of the US.
Research Paper Doctorate
Civil Rights Movement Whole Books
Whole books have been written on the subject of the civil rights struggle of African-Americans in the United States, a struggle that undoubtedly began when the first African slaves were brought to North America against…
Research Paper Doctorate
Causes and Course of the American Civil War
Even when the constitutional convention had occurred in 1787, the leaders of America knew that there was a dividing line between the states that wanted slavery and those who did not.
Research Paper Doctorate
Karl Marx and John Maynard
Karl Marx (1818-1883) and John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946) are two of the most important economists of modern times. While Marx's political philosophy and economic theories triggered some of the most significant…