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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Virgil Aeneid Translated by John
Year and online location: Written by Virgil in 19 B.C.E.; Published by the Internet Classics archive in 1994:
Research Paper Doctorate
Corporate leadership principles and practices
An Analysis of Successful Leadership in the 21st Century
Research Paper Doctorate
Ring of Truth a Translator\'s Testimony
¶ … Translator's Testimony, Phillips discusses the many discoveries he made when translating the New Testament. His discussion of his journey is both inspiring and promising. The knowledge that even a well-worn clergy…
Thesis Undergraduate
Elizabethan Renascence
This paper examines the nature of love and art in the time of the Renaissance from the perspective of Nicholas Hilliard, Hans Holbein, Philip Sidney and William Shakespeare. It analyzes the two different mediums of painting and poetry and shows how they were considered to have similar natures and even to a degree modes of expression.
Paper Doctorate
Rime of the Ancient Mariner
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the longest poem written by poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It was written in 1797-98 and was subsequently published in 1798 with a collection of poems known as Lyrical Ballads. This poem, along with the other poems in Lyrical Ballads marked the beginning of the English romantic literature and this imaginary tale highlights the symbolic killing of the albatross. It also marked the shift to the modern poetry changing the direction of the English poetry and literature.
Research Paper Doctorate
18th Century What Makes the 18th Century
What makes the 18th century such a vast plethora of diverse opinions, creations and philosophies is the fact that the world was changing in a variety of ways. The Industrial Revolution and rationalism were having…
Paper Undergraduate
Ethics, epistemology, and religion: conceptual intersections
There are many definitions of religion as there are people who try to define it. This work discusses the concept of God, and cites reasons why it is important to prove that God exists. It gives arguments for the existence of God and outlines reasons why I believe the argument of Christian theism is strongest. Neoclassical theism borrows from the life and beliefs of Charles Hartshorne. All the research on the concept of God would be useless if He does not exist.
Thesis Doctorate
William Foxwell Albright and his archaeological contributions
This paper examines the career of William F. Albright and shows it influenced his belief in Christianity and not how his religion affected his scientific inquiry, as his critics have attempted to show. Albright's study of Biblical archeology presented to evidence that the claims of the Bible were true and therefore part of history.
Research Paper Doctorate
Judge Dee and Confucian Justice in Tang Dynasty China
Judge Dee's Unquenchable Thirst For Finding The Truth, When Solving Legal Cases
Paper Undergraduate
Religion and Mysticism Two of the World\'s
Two of the world's major religions, Islam and Christianity seem to be very different belief systems. When comprising a mental picture of a practitioner of one and then the other, they seem to have very different…