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Theme
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Theme is one of the most fundamental concepts in literary studies, referring to the central ideas or messages that give a work its deeper meaning. Students across introductory composition courses, world literature seminars, and advanced literary analysis classes are regularly asked to identify and interpret theme because it trains close reading and critical thinking. Works like William Blake's "The Lamb," William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily," Edgar Allan Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart," and Gabriel García Márquez's "A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings" appear frequently in these assignments because they carry layered, discussable themes around death, love, society, and human nature.

The papers archived on this topic take a range of approaches. Many focus on single-text analysis, tracing how one theme develops across a short story or poem — as seen in essays on Liliana Hecker's "The Stolen Party," August Wilson's Fences, and Robert Frost's "Out, Out." Others adopt a broader comparative or cultural lens, examining theme across multiple works or situating it within American literature as a whole. Some essays combine thematic analysis with attention to symbolism, while others move toward ethical or societal interpretation, connecting a work's ideas to larger questions about life, class, and identity.

A strong essay on theme opens with a specific, arguable thesis that names the theme and makes a claim about how or why the author develops it. Textual evidence — quoted passages, specific scenes, repeated images — carries the most weight and should be interpreted rather than simply summarized. The most common pitfall is defining a theme too broadly, such as stating only that a work is "about love" without explaining what the text actually argues about love's nature or consequences.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Oppression: forms, causes, and societal impacts
¶ … oppression the movie The Matrix is the theme of consciousness. In the movie's most dramatic plot twist it turns out that Neo, the movie's protagonist, has not been living inside the real world, but a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Music's role in society and culture
The impact of music on the presidential campaign song
Research Paper Doctorate
Lottery by Shirley Jackson Is a Masterful
Lottery by Shirley Jackson is a masterful short story that tricks its reader initially, and later surprises the reader into the understanding of the dynamics of scapegoat. The value of the book lies in its narrative…
Research Paper Doctorate
Midsummer Night\'s Dream the Difficulty of Love
The difficulty of love is one of the predominant themes in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. While love itself is not a theme of the play, Shakespeare uses romantic elements, and troubles stemming from romance…
Research Paper Doctorate
Scott Fitzgerald\'s Character Dick Diver From Tender
Scott Fitzgerald's character Dick Diver from "Tender is the Night" takes on characteristics of both Jay Gatsby and Nick Carraway from "The Great Gatsby." Two sources. MLA.
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare\'s Play\'s Taming of the Shrew Female
¶ … Shakespeare's play's Taming of the Shrew female lead, Katherine by answering the question that whether she was eventually tamed or not. The Works Cited four sources in MLA format.
Research Paper Doctorate
Glow Worm if You Have Any Questions
If you have any questions about this paper, please contact our customer service department at Reader's Report
Research Paper Doctorate
City of Joy,\" by Dominique Lapierre. Specifically,
¶ … City of Joy," by Dominique Lapierre. Specifically, it will study the underlying message of hope and love that permeates the book, and how such a devastating life can be a "city of joy" to the slum dwellers in…
Paper Doctorate
Walt Whitman and Herman Melville \"Crossing Brooklyn
Walt Whitman's poem "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" and Herman Melville's short story "Bartleby the Scrivener" are set in New York City during the early years of the industrial revolution, but are markedly different in tone, theme and the perceptions and feelings of the main characters. Melville's characters exist without joy, love or hope, and merely drag themselves through a life of drudgery and alienation, without making any human connections to each other or to nature. Mankind in Bartleby's world is simply trapped in a pointless existence that ends with death, and unlike Whitman's narrator they are unable to rise above this grim, mundane world or imagine a common link with others or with the past and the future. Rather than simply being tools and machines carrying out routine, white-collar tasks, Whitman's narrator finds the resources within himself to transform an ordinary scene of returning home from work into a sublime spiritual experience, in which he perceives a bond with all of mankind, past, present and future, as well as with nature and the entire universe in a way that Bartleby and his coworkers never could have imagined.
Paper Undergraduate
Job Satisfaction Among Emergency Room Nurses: A Literature Review
The literature exhibited particular gaps with regard to the initial problem that I was considering. For example, I began thinking about the difficulties of emergency room nursing care and the jeopardy to morale and job satisfaction that was just part of on-the-job exposure to the emergency room setting. Patients were often very badly hurt, but they were just as often in need of routine medical care for common, albeit uncomfortable conditions. Treating patients in emergency room settings often meant dealing with people who were violent toward those who were trying to care for them. In addition, much of the literature—for no apparent reason—was based on data and studies from non-American hospitals and emergency rooms. Dwindling resources in some locations meant fewer staff members to do the same amount of work in general hospitals and in emergency rooms. Physicians were often the focus of these studies rather than nursing staff. Balancing the preponderance of some kinds of studies and the dearth of others, I began to see a pattern that indicated a line of research: Job satisfaction of emergency room nurses in American hospitals. My search narrowed to the following key words: American hospital emergency rooms, emergency rooms, emergency room care, emergency care, emergency nurse, job satisfaction, job stress, job burnout, job fatigue, job turnover, workload, work engagement, and psychosomatic symptoms. Gradually, a mosaic of literature was compiled that illustrated the need for more research on job satisfaction and staff morale in nurses who practice in the emergency rooms of American hospitals.