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Western Culture
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Western culture is one of the broadest and most debated subjects in world studies, encompassing the historical development of ideas, institutions, art, religion, science, and social values that emerged primarily from Europe and spread globally. Students encounter this topic across disciplines including history, sociology, literature, philosophy, and political science. Its academic interest lies in tracing how a set of traditions — shaped by forces such as the Scientific Revolution, Christianity, and Enlightenment reason — came to define concepts of the individual, society, and progress that continue to influence global life today.

The papers collected here approach Western culture from strikingly varied angles. Some focus on specific artistic or literary figures, such as George Frideric Handel and Emily Dickinson, to examine how individual works reflect broader cultural values. Others take a comparative or sociological lens, exploring Westernization's impact on Iranian social values, the tension between Western and non-Western identity in an "us versus them" framework, or why certain forms of harmony developed differently across Western and Asian cultures. Additional essays treat religion, economics, gender stereotypes, critical thinking, and the history of the scientific method as entry points into understanding how Western thought took shape and spread.

A strong essay on Western culture requires a clearly bounded thesis — arguing a specific claim about one tradition, period, or cultural process rather than attempting to define the West in its entirety. Evidence drawn from primary sources, historical events, or specific texts carries more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is treating Western culture as a single unified system; acknowledging its internal contradictions and external influences produces more persuasive and credible analysis.

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Paper Undergraduate
The Romantic Child and Emile
Jean Jacques Rousseau wrote Emile in 1762. The alternate title of this innovative novel is On Education because Rousseau's motivation for the story was to describe a system of education that would allow the natural…
Paper Undergraduate
Prescription Drugs / Generation RX
Generation RX Exposes the Dangers of Over-Medicating America's Children
Research Paper Undergraduate
Islam the Main Argument Set
The main argument set forth by Edward Said in "The Clash of Definitions" has much to do with countering the conclusions of political scientist Samuel P. Huntington whose "Clash of Civilizations" maintains that cultural…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Stories of Art by James Elkins: A Critical Book Review
Elkins, James. Stories of Art. Routledge, 2002.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ancient Buddhism
Buddhist religion and its values were an important factor that shaped the evolution of western culture and the aesthetic values of the time it helped create.
Essay Doctorate
Cultural Diversity and Ethical Relativism
Europe and the United States are cultures where issues of sex and sexuality can be discussed freely and openly in the course of the day. Evidently, carrying out research on sex and sexuality may be easier or hard.
Research Paper Doctorate
Epic heroes in literature and mythology
Epic Heroes of folklore and classic literature have several common traits, which allow them to be called "heroes." Epic heroes do not only posses virtues common for "heroes" but they do also perform heroic deeds for the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Group Communications African Art: Woyo
What we think of as 'art' in a Western context is often taken to mean the type of art that is apprehended in a museum. Art viewed as such is not functional; rather it is decorative or expressive, like a sculpture or a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Catalog of Earthly Wonders, Only
¶ … catalog of earthly wonders, only a few exist in that realm of unsubstantiated rumor upheld by the broadest variety of source. The Lost Continent is, truly, one of these wonders - a city made of both earth and sea,…
Paper Doctorate
Heroes of Homer\'s Great Work, the Illiad,
The classics have provided Western Civilization with many heroic figures. Listed among them are Achilles and Hector. Historically, Achilles has been considered the greater hero but, in actuality Hector may have been in possession of more admirable qualities. This article reviews the life of both men and examines which is more deserving of the honor of being considered a hero.