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Supernatural
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The supernatural encompasses phenomena that exist beyond the boundaries of the natural world — spirits, prophecies, divine intervention, mythological beings, and forces that defy rational explanation. In academic settings, this topic appears across religious studies, literature, anthropology, and cultural history courses. It invites students to examine how different societies and texts construct meaning around what cannot be empirically verified, and how belief in supernatural power shapes human behavior, identity, and storytelling across time and place.

The papers archived here approach the supernatural from several distinct angles. Literary analysis features heavily, with essays examining the role of the supernatural in works such as Macbeth, Hamlet, and the myths of Hercules, Theseus, and Gilgamesh, as well as stories by authors like Stephen King and Gabriel García Márquez's symbolism in A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings. Cultural and historical approaches appear as well, including explorations of the Gothic period, Maori cultural practices, and Renaissance English theater. Some papers engage with realism and naturalism to question or contrast supernatural frameworks, while others take a more contemporary focus, treating subjects like crop circles and the meaning and purpose of dreams.

A strong essay on the supernatural establishes a clear, arguable thesis about what function the supernatural serves — whether narrative, ideological, psychological, or spiritual — rather than simply cataloguing occurrences. Evidence drawn from close reading of primary texts or specific cultural frameworks tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the supernatural as mere decoration; effective essays connect it directly to character, power, or the construction of reality within the work or culture under study.

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Paper Undergraduate
The metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
In analyzing the short story The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka, it is important to consider the different dimensions that the author tried to illustrate in the story. Three dimensions or themes are depicted in the story,…
Paper Undergraduate
Thomas Becket Movie Peter Glenville\'s
Peter Glenville's motion picture Becket relates to the life of Thomas Becket and how it was shaped by his principles. Consequent to a series of events involving Becket and King Henry II and the disagreements emerging…
Paper Masters
Lamb by William Blake Subtleness
One of the principal themes in William Blake's poem "The Lamb" is innocence, as the poet emphasizes this concept throughout the poem. Blake initially presents the lamb with a rhetorical question, as both he and his…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Asian Literature Post Modern Literature
Post modern literature often calls to mind the conflicts of modernization and the cultural changes that ensue. Traditional cultures are often demonstratively changed by the process of revolution and in the eastern…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Veidemanis, a High-School English Teacher
¶ … Veidemanis, a high-school English teacher in Oshkosh, Wisconsin and a well-known literary critic on British Literature of the 19th century, offers a number of very intriguing ways to teach Mary Shelley's classic…
Thesis Doctorate
Nathaniel Hawthorne: life and literary works
Were all the literary works of Nathaniel Hawthorne compiled into a single manuscript, then appropriately filtered to include only works of prose and fiction, and if an attempt were then made to uncover a single motif…
Paper Undergraduate
Evolution -- Id Evolution vs.
According to Stanley a. Rice, associate professor of biology at Southeastern Oklahoma State University, the term evolution can best be defined as a process which involves many different kinds of change, usually gradual…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Throne of Death Akira Kurosawa\'s
Akira Kurosawa's Throne of Blood is more than just an adaptation of Shakespeare's Macbeth. The film is a visual feast with riddled rich symbolism. It is that symbolism that makes Throne of Blood so memorable.
Essay Doctorate
Hmong cultural beliefs and their effects on healthcare treatment practices
The Hmong people are a group of Asian Americans who have been living in the United States since an immigration program was started in 1975. Because of their strong animistic faith and beliefs in the supernatural, they have been slow to adapt to the healthcare practices of the United States. The Hmong continue to rely on alternative medicine and faith healers to cure illnesses. Health Beliefs and Practices among the Hmong The health practices and beliefs of the Hmong people are traditional for the most part. The Hmong are a spiritual people and this philosophy permeates their concepts of health and illness (Cha, 2010). Like all other matters of an individual's existence, the health of a person is also linked to the community. The clan elder is consulted in the case of a serious illness. The help of an herbal therapist massage therapist or acupuncture therapist may be sought. In more serious cases, the services of faith healers are sought to rid the body of evil spirits causing the illness.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Stanley Kubrick's Visionary Filmmaking: Style, Vision, and Impact
The Madness of Stanley Kubrick: An Avante Garde Analysis