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Speech
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What is Speech?

Speech as an academic subject sits at the intersection of communications, linguistics, rhetoric, and education. Students across composition courses, public speaking classes, communications programs, and language education curricula are regularly asked to engage with it. The topic is academically rich because it encompasses both the craft of oral delivery and the deeper analysis of how language shapes identity, persuasion, and public life. From understanding how political figures construct arguments to examining how speech and language impediments affect individual development, the subject demands critical thinking about communication as a fundamental human ability.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a rhetorical-analytical angle, examining landmark addresses such as Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech or Herbert Hoover's "Rugged Individualism" to understand how a speaker's style reflects rhetorical purpose. Others adopt a policy or legal framework, as seen in treatments of the Central Hudson Test and United States foreign policy. Educational and developmental perspectives also appear strongly, including work on speech and language characteristics in deaf-blind children, literacy assessment tools, and curriculum design for teacher education students. Discourse and conversation analysis represent yet another methodological lens present in this collection.

A strong essay on speech benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one angle — rhetorical, developmental, legal, or historical — rather than trying to cover all of them at once. Evidence drawn from specific texts, case studies, or documented language data tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating speech purely as performance while neglecting the underlying linguistic or social structures that give spoken communication its meaning and power.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Criminal policy and drug court effectiveness
Drug Courts: A Program to Reinvent Justice for Addicts
Paper Doctorate
Character Hamlet, Ghost, and Horatio Character Analysis
Character analysis of Hamlet, Ghost, Horatio: Act 1, Scenes 1-5
Research Paper Doctorate
Walter Reuther and his labor activism
Walter Reuther was one of the most powerful labor leaders of the 20th century. He was also one of the most influential labor leaders in history. He headed the United Automobile Workers labor union.
Paper Undergraduate
Network Directed by Sidney Lumet
This essay examines the theme of intergenerational conflict in the 1976 film Network. The older generation is represented by Max and Howard, while the younger is represented by Diana and Frank. The film criticizes both generations, and demonstrates how the younger effectively consumes and replaces the older.
Research Paper Doctorate
Neanderthal cultural complexity and evidence
When one thinks of the Humanoid genus Homo Sapiens neanderthalensis (HSN) they picture a very primitive creature, simplistic in nature with few social complexities. However, upon close examination of several Neanderthan…
Paper High School
Galeano's Lizard Story: Themes, Allegory, and Politics
Literary Research Paper: "The Story of the Lizard Who Had the Habit of Dining on His Wives" By Eduardo Galeano "The Story of the Lizard Who Had the Habit of Dining on His Wives" seems to be a short, simple, strange story at first. But if a person looks into Eduardo Galeano's biography, the story makes much more sense and seems to say a lot more than just lizard-eats-women/woman-eats-lizard. The story actually says a lot about "be careful what you wish for," "what goes around comes around," the relationships between men and women, and political symbolism about South America. Maybe even most important is the theme of "rich against poor" because of Galeano's background and Marxist political beliefs. Eduardo Galeano is an important political leftist from South America. Raised a Catholic but soon to become a Marxist, he worked in many jobs but eventually became a writer. As a writer, he has fought for the poor, for the people of his own country of Uruguay and for Freedom of Speech. Although he has suffered because of his strong political beliefs, he is also praised and rewarded for being a fearless fighter. His short story of "The Story of the Lizard Who Had the Habit of Dining on His Wives" is not his most famous work and it is only a 4-page story; however, it has many themes. The story has the themes of "be careful what you wish for," "what goes around comes around," the relationships between men and women, and political symbolism about South America. Though nobody mentioned this, his short story also seems to have the theme of "rich against poor," which makes sense because of Galeano's history and political beliefs. Even his short story shows why Galeano is thought to be a major voice for the poor, his countrymen and Freedom of Speech.
Paper Undergraduate
Structural and Transgenerational Family Therapy Treatment Plan
Categories and Phases of Loss and Grief for Nancy
Paper Doctorate
Comparison and contrast as analytical methods
This paper compares and contracts the movie and the book Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. The main themes and plot development are discussed as well as how they are presented to the respective audience. While many see this novel as anti-war, the paper concludes the central theme of both works is that life is meaningless and pointless, the universe does not care one iota about the human race, and humanity's myopia and self-delusion blinds them to this reality while leading them to their own destruction. The movie softens this theme. Another feature of this paper is a personal interview with a World War II veteran.
Paper High School
Starting Point Carol Delaney\'s Dictum
I decided to observe two people communicating to one another. One happened to be Hispanic, the other Caucasian, but this is incidental to the essay. What was central was my endeavor of reliving Carol Delaney's dictum that language comes from what we experience and what we speak. Language is the end result of our personal experiences that makes us see the world/ our environment in a certain way. These perceptions then saturate our thoughts (since experience and cognition is linked) and comes out in our communication. Everything in the world from tree to desk to person is simply a symbol. It is just a ‘thing'. It is our experience that imbues it with certain deeper layers of meaning. And these can sometimes distort the ‘thing' totally. To elaborate: we have the flag of a country. It is just a rectangular cloth with a certain number of stripes and stars. Reducibly that is all it is. Yet, some stand on and burn this cloth, and others find that looking at it brings them to tears. It is the symbol that evokes certain reactions based on our experience. Language is the conveyor of that experience. To relive this, I watched two people communicating to one another and decided to see the phenomena in an antrhopolocial way.
Paper Undergraduate
The Merchant of Venice: contextual variations across time, place, and audience
William Shakespeare is one of the most important figures of the universal literature and an essential figure in the playwright scenery. One of his most important plays, "The Merchants of Venice" is to this day both admired and subject to discussions and interpretations. One of the main reasons for this is the complex nature of the structure of the play, of its characters, the language, as well as the environment in which the pay was written and the public it was addressed to.