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Theater
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Theater is one of the oldest forms of human expression, and it appears across humanities, arts, and performance studies courses at nearly every level of education. Students are asked to engage with it as both a historical institution and a living art form, examining how plays, actors, and staging practices reflect and shape the societies that produce them. Its interdisciplinary nature makes it academically rich: a single production can be analyzed through literary, cultural, historical, and sociological lenses. Works like Everyman and Six Characters in Search of an Author appear frequently in coursework because they raise enduring questions about character, audience, and the purpose of performance itself.

The papers written on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Historical surveys are common, covering subjects such as Elizabethan theater, the Theater of Dionysos in ancient Greece, and world theater history in broader comparative frames. Some essays focus on specific figures like Michael Bennett DiFiglia or explore non-Western performance traditions, while others use urban centers like New York City as case studies for understanding how theater functions within a cultural economy. Occasionally, film is brought into conversation with theatrical traditions, as seen in analyses connecting works like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon to stage performance conventions.

A strong essay on theater grounds its argument in a clear relationship between a specific play, period, or practitioner and a larger interpretive claim about how performance communicates meaning. Evidence drawn from the text of plays, historical staging conditions, or audience reception tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating plot summary as analysis — the goal is always to explain what theatrical choices reveal, not simply to describe what happens on stage.

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Paper Undergraduate
Dickens and Marx the England
The England depicted by Charles Dickens in his a Christmas Carol was also the world that influenced Karl Marx, for he was living in England when he wrote the Communist Manifesto and certain other works along with…
Paper Undergraduate
Fashion and Identity Fashion, Culture,
Culture is a complex phenomenon. Any gathering of human beings develops its own culture given enough time; this can be observed on both macro and micro levels. In the study of history and art, scholars speak of Roman…
Paper Undergraduate
Ballet and Gender Girly Boys
For at least the past century and a half, the performance of ballet has also been a performance of gender and sexuality. That this should be true is hardly surprising: Ballet presents dancers in a minimum of clothing, and what they do wear is stretched tightly across their bodies. Ballet shows off the human form, putatively in the service of art: Those leotards and tights are worn to show off the dancers' lines, etc.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Companies Granting Discounts to Special
Perhaps the first experience most people have of the phenomenon of discount pricing for special groups is when they attend their first film. Children under the age of 12 in most movie theaters pay a lower price.
Research Paper Undergraduate
History of Chicanos in Los Angeles
is widely considered to be a country of immigrants and its culture one that was created as a result of the mixture of different other national identities. From this point-of-view, it can be said that the Mexican…
Paper Doctorate
Tyler Perry\'s Why Did I Get Married
¶ … Tyler Perry's Why Did I Get Married Too?
Paper Undergraduate
Historical events and people: a discussion of key influences
The Taj Mahal is India's most famous architectural structure. It is actually a beautifully preserved tomb whose name is translated as "Crown Palace." It dates back to the Seventeenth Century and the reign of the Fifth…
Paper Undergraduate
Social criticism of Luces de Bohemia by Valle-Inclán
A number of influential Spanish playwrights were active during the early part of the 20th century, including Ramon Maria del Valle-Inclán who invented a new dramatic device that he termed "esperpento" in his play, "Luces de Bohemia" or "Bohemian Lights." Originally published in 1920, this play about the people of the City of Madrid was not actually produced until 1963, but Valle-Inclán's other major contributions to dramatic literature include Divinas palabras and the three Comedias bárbaras, but most authorities agree that "Luces de Bohemia" is Valle-Inclán's masterpiece. To gain some fresh insights into the delayed production of this play and the social criticism that it generated at the time as well as the time, space and historical moment in which it was created, this paper provides a review of the relevant literature concerning Ramon Maria del Valle-Inclan's play, "Bohemian Lights," followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams
"Where are the snows of yesteryear?" asks Tennessee Williams in the opening screen of The Glass Menagerie (401). Williams explains in the production notes to this famous play that he has left in the manuscript a device omitted from the "acting version" of the play (Williams 395), a series of messages projected on screens, some verbal, some pictorial, that prompt and reflect the action on stage. Williams explains the trajectory of action succinctly before those notes as occurring in two parts, preparation for a gentleman caller, and "the gentleman calls" (394). Between those two bookends Williams brings back snows of a yesteryear that have melted away forever, but which his Prince can never forget. Such is the nature of living in time, he suggests, from the very first words of the Production Notes (395). Such innovations as the screen projection or the tansparent set properties Williams employs in The Glass Menagerie attempt "a more penetrating and vivid expression of things as they are" (Williams 395). The fact that The Glass Menagerie has captivated so many, called by Hale "the great American play" more performed and reprinted "in modern theater history" (27) indicates Williams was not alone in an obsession with a past he could never recapture, but could never fully leave behind.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Greek Drama the Trojan Women:
The Trojan Woman" (1971) directed by Michael Cacoyannis takes upon itself an extremely difficult task as a film -- to translate the medium of Euripides' ancient Greek drama into cinematic technique.