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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 Doctorate
Are There Too Many Musicals in the West End?
Michael BIllington believes that the theatre boom in the West End contributes to the degradation of the quality of theatre in London. I agree with Billington's position. The ticket prices in the West End coupled with the excessive amount of repetitive productions is not good for the theatre tradition or for the consuming public. Furthermore, I believe that the audiences have the power to effect creative change in the West End.
Research Paper Doctorate
Little Women and Popular Culture
Little Women, Louisa May Alcott's defining work, which brought her much fame in her time, is a biographical account of her family. In the book, her father Amos Bronson is Mr. March and her mother Abigail May is Marmee,…
Paper Doctorate
Amendments 14, 15, and 19
Both Sibyl Vane and Liza function as innocent victims in The Portrait of Dorian Gray and Notes from the Underground. Their characters are little more than opportunities for the narrators to demonstrate how corrupt they have become. As such, the narrators reinforce the principle motifs of these works, that society itself is debauched.
Paper Undergraduate
The Hunger Games
Lion Gate has many strengths in which it can play to. First of all, in regards to The Hunger Games trilogy, the first movie in the series was a blockbuster success that broke the $400 million mark in domestic sales (Orden, 2012). Therefore the company can play to this extremely loyal customer base. Furthermore, the company has performed well despite the economic downturn and its effects on the industry in general (Caris, 2012). Some of the weaknesses that Lions Gate must work to overcome are the relatively low amounts of consumer disposable income as well as the problems associated with pirating and copyright infringement.
Paper Undergraduate
Unit 3 topic overview and key concepts
This paper is a discussion of Willa Cather's Paul's Case. It examines the meanings of "theater" and "Romance" in Cather's characterization of Paul. Explaining the why Cather capitalize the word Romance. The paper explains the relationship between theater and Romance for Paul as well as investigating the effect of Cather's emphasis "Perhaps it was because, in Paul's world, the natural nearly always wore the guise of ugliness, that a certain element of artificiality, seemed to him necessary in beauty"
Paper Undergraduate
Eugene O\'Neill\'s Mythic Re-Enactments
This paper examines Eugene O'Neill's use of the mythic structure of Aeschylus' Oresteia in his trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra. The play suggests that O'Neill's play is built around acts of repetition and re-enactment: not only does O'Neill himself re-enact the Oresteia, but his characters seem to ritually re-enact the behavior of those who have gone before. The play connects Mannon's death in the play to a ritualized re-enactment of the death of Abraham Lincoln.
Research Paper Doctorate
Battle of Bristoe Station: Confederate Tactics and Defeat
¶ … Battle of Bristoe Station led many to question the Confederacy's grasp of tactics as it was a strategic blunder. In many respects, it confirmed assumptions made after the battle of Gettysburg that the leadership of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Mall culture and consumer behavior patterns
Park Plaza Mall is a very appealing mall. For instance, the overall feel of the mall is bright and lively because it was remodeled ten years ago with a glass ceiling. This not only gave the mall a more contemporary…
Paper Doctorate
Analysis of O Brother, Where Art Thou? and its literary connections
Famed filmmaking brothers Joel and Ethan Coen wrote and directed O Brother, Where Art Thou? The film was released shortly before Christmas of the year 2000. The film is a sort of remix and remake.
Paper Undergraduate
Implications of Dod Force Reduction Plan
Reducing the defense budget will not necessarily make America less safe, provided that it is done in a measured and intelligent fashion. Cuts must be made strategically, to reduce waste and to consolidate the Department of Defense's resources. Political support for cuts amongst members of the the American public and Congress alike make cuts in the defense budget inevitable. This paper makes an argument based upon logistical and political grounds.