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Storytelling
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Storytelling is the study of how narratives are constructed, transmitted, and received across cultures, media, and time periods. It appears in communications courses as well as literature, education, psychology, and cultural studies, making it one of the most cross-disciplinary subjects students encounter. What makes storytelling academically rich is its connection to power, identity, and meaning-making — questions about whose stories get told, how language shapes understanding, and how narratives function within and across cultures. Works like Jhumpa Lahiri's fiction, Augustine's Confessions, Cervantes, and Homer's Odyssey all serve as primary texts through which these questions are examined.

The papers written on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Literary analysis is common, with students examining an author's techniques to uncover themes — including redemption, as in The Kite Runner, or mockery and reader enjoyment in Cervantes. Comparative work sets authors or texts side by side to highlight differences in style, voice, or cultural context. Some essays take a cultural or anthropological angle, exploring how storytelling functions across societies and communities. Others move into applied or case-study territory, looking at storytelling in educational settings, child development, or the psychological dimensions of lived experience.

A strong essay on storytelling needs a focused thesis that goes beyond observing that narrative is important — it should argue something specific about how a storytelling technique, tradition, or choice produces a particular effect or meaning. Evidence drawn from close reading, cultural examples, or documented research carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating storytelling too broadly, so anchoring the argument in a specific text, community, or context will keep analysis sharp and persuasive.

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Essay Undergraduate
Role of Environment in Shaping American Indian Storytelling
This essay deals with two Native American authors, N. Scott Monday and Sherman Alexie, and their respective novels. They explain through their stories, the interconnectedness of time, the importance of memory, and the history of their culture. They use environment such as beliefs, animals, etc, to convey their tales and hopefully help the reader retain their memory.
Paper Doctorate
Rhetorical Criticism Narrative and Dramatic Criticism
Narration as a Human Communication Paradigm: The Case of Public Moral Argument
Paper Undergraduate
Close Reading of Scudder's "Look at Your Fish" (1874)
Scudder's thesis is direct, yet it comes at the conclusion of the work. The writing has a basic formality in structure and formatting while it may be slightly less formal in its content. Scudder does not write to persuade his audience; readers infer from the tone that the author's intent is to share a moment in education that influence the author personally, professionally, and academically for years to come. Scudder successfully conveys a "teaching moment" he had with a professor because of his tone, organization, and succinct writing.
Paper Masters
Leonardo da Vinci: life, work, and legacy
Leonardo da Vinci was a multi-talented musician, inventor, philosopher, and artist. This paper explores some of his work and contributions to the humanities. It also speaks to controversy regarding his Last Supper work and some more peculiar parts of his personality (mirror image writing, unfinished works, etc.) It concludes with ideas about why he is still relevant today.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Contemporary theatre and modern performance practices
The paper is a type of reflection. The student is asked to reflect upon the plays read over the course of the year and describe which plays the student liked in terms of them as pieces of theatre, and as plays that appealed to the student on a personal nature. The student is asked to explain what he/she thinks theatre today is or should be, and what are the specific characteristics of theatre and the plays read that appeal to the student personally.
Research Paper Doctorate
Effectiveness of time-sensitive group intervention for sexually abused preschool children
This paper will review existing research on allegedly sexually abused preschool aged children. The traumatic psychological effects of the abuse including low self-esteem, poor peer relationships, behavior problems,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Theology, religion, and Christian perspectives
Relativist said, 'The world does not exist, England does not exist, Oxford does not exist and I am confident that I do not Exist!' When Lewis was asked to reply, he stood up and said, 'How am I to talk to a man who's…
Thesis Doctorate
Storytelling as narrative communication and cultural practice
A tale of fictitious or real events or narrative is defined as a story. For our hungry souls, the nourishment is stories. Palatable stories exist due to these elements of truth. There are many ways to tell a story to the latest Hollywood blockbuster from classic novels written by the greatest writers and to ghost tales around a campfire from prehistoric drawings on a cave. Creating an environment in which everything is possible, the story teller is the magician. The pictures seen in the mind of the storyteller are shown and passed and for interpretation are passed to the minds of the listeners. Storytelling is all the rage in business. The persuasive effects of a story are only been able to speculate until recently. But, a serious study related to the human mind and the influences of a story in it has been begun by psychology over the last several decades. In fact, in comparison to writing, at changing beliefs fiction seems to be more effective as to persuade through evidence and arguments is the specific purpose of writing. The power of stories is finally waking up in organizations. In compare to the questionnaire and interviews based approach in organizations, the patterns of understanding, behavior and culture are revealed in a more effective way by stories. The ideation patterns of a particular organization are revealed by the stories told in an organization in all aspects of organization life, like, in project reviews and formally in presentations. The recognition of a possible work is integral to the evolution of a different and new world. However, potentiality for such a world is continuously claimed by the status quo. To bind us to this world, different truths are used by the status quo. The Telos of life is supposedly the survival. Therefore, a cosmology is required by any threat to the status quo so that a path and a view of a different world are provided to us for realizing this world. I believe that this cosmology is given to us by considering narrative as a way of being in the world as it fundamentally alters out relation to our own humanity, our relation to others and our relation to the world. The condition of our humanity is intertwined with the condition of the world by it. In total, a compelling narrative is derived by this emergent view of narrative as the realms of possibilities are enlarged by it.
Paper Undergraduate
Verification of Interpretation -- Trustworthiness Credibility Transferability
Verification of Interpretation -- Trustworthiness
Paper Doctorate
Pan's Labyrinth
The movie 'El Laberinto del Fauno' with 'Pan's Labyrinth' as English translation of the title directed by Del Toro revolves round the issue of the reason behind story telling. Although it is fact that in traditional…