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Theorists
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Theorists as a subject of academic study appears across nearly every discipline, from psychology and political science to anthropology, management, and public administration. Students are asked to engage with theorists not simply to summarize their ideas but to evaluate how those ideas were constructed, what assumptions they rest on, and how they hold up against evidence or competing frameworks. The breadth of this topic reflects a core academic skill: understanding that knowledge is produced by specific thinkers working within historical and intellectual contexts, and that those thinkers can be questioned, compared, and built upon.

The papers archived here take a wide range of approaches. Comparative analysis is especially common, with writers placing theorists side by side to highlight agreements, contradictions, or gaps — as seen in work on personality theories, anti-federalist theorists, and public administration thinkers. Other papers take a discipline-specific focus, examining theorists within psychology, anthropology, humor studies, entrepreneurship, and organizational behavior. Some essays ground theoretical discussion in concrete policy contexts, including labor, alternative dispute resolution, and workplace issues like the glass ceiling, using theory as a lens to interpret real-world cases.

A strong essay on theorists requires a clearly bounded thesis — rather than surveying every idea a thinker produced, focus on a specific claim, contribution, or debate. Evidence should come from primary theoretical texts where possible, supported by scholarly critique. The most common pitfall is treating a theorist's ideas as fixed truths rather than as arguments to be assessed. Engaging critically, acknowledging limitations and historical context, consistently produces more persuasive and analytically rigorous work.

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Paper Undergraduate
Cinema Studies: Book Reviews Monaco,
Monaco, J. (2000). How to read a film, 3rd ed. Oxford University Press.
Research Paper Doctorate
National identity and culture construction through fashion in China and Japan
Fashion and Cultural Identity on China and Japan
Paper Undergraduate
Economic Uncertainty That in 2007,
¶ … economic uncertainty that in 2007, before any of the sub-prime mortgages had hit the proverbial fan, money was still a far more influential factor among voters than social policy.
Paper Doctorate
Juliet Mitchell\'s Introduction to the Selected Melanie
This paper responds to Juliet Mitchell's introduction to The Selected Melanie Klein, which synthesizes Freud and Klein. Points of emphasis in this paper include subject-object relations; the role of language in subject formation; the association between anxiety, tension, and pleasure; and the distinction between the conscious, unconscious, and preconscious minds.
Research Paper Doctorate
Theories Currently Being Used in the Field
¶ … theories currently being used in the field of nursing today. While each has their respective positive and negative points, all are useful in certain nursing settings, and can assist nurses in their positions.
Paper High School
Theme in The Beast in the Jungle
Beast in the Jungle by Henry James is about a man named John Marcher who accomplishes nothing in his life because of his conviction that something catastrophic is likely to happen to him.
Research Paper Doctorate
Customer-centric call center operations and design
¶ … ability of an organization to deliver exceptional customer experiences the greater their ability to survive in a turbulent global economy. The managing of customer experiences and the quantification of those…
Paper Doctorate
Institutional Econ a Comparison of the Old
A Comparison of the Old and New Institutionalism: Perspectives on and Applications of Economic Theory
Paper Doctorate
Jabri, Adrain, and Boje (2008)
The article of Jabri, Adrain, and Boje (2008) on alternative to the monological model is fascinating in that it causes us not only to think about communication in an alternate way but also reverses paradigms in other factors too. Jabri, Adrain, and Boje (2008) submit that Western culture emphasizes the monological model due to its tendency of viewing the recipient of communication as an I-It (I.e. object) rather than as an I-Thou and therefore addressing the other in a peremptory or objective, detached manner. Perceiving the other, however, as complex person would stimulate a multi-dialogic strand of communication and this would replace the monological model. As prescription, accordingly, Jabri, Adrain, and Boje (2008) see Bakhtin's approach as more suited to a constructive mode of communicating. It seems to me, too, that expanding on Jabri, Adrain, and Boje's (2008) thoughts, the monological model may be more suited to a specific historical and geographical context and time. Certain periods such as the modern ages may be more demonstrative of the monological model than may be an earlier period. Similarly, too, certain countries, such s America, may be representative of the monological model than other countries/ continents such as India may be.
Essay Doctorate
Organizational culture effects on individual control and interpretation across company levels
Why the Denison Model of Culture is Right for TUIU