Essay Topic Hub

Whales
Essays

111+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

111 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED
Browse academic paper examples on Whales — model essays, research papers, and study materials from the PaperDue archive.
Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Good Bacteria and Bad Bacteria
What are toxicants and how do they affect living organisms?
Paper Undergraduate
Korean History, Culture, and Society
¶ … academic and popular discourse on East Asia, Korea has a long, strong, and unique history. The culture of Korea has evolved over the last several millennia to become one of the world's most distinctive, homogenous,…
Essay Undergraduate
Albinism: characteristics, health implications, and social considerations
¶ … condition may affect those who posses this deformity.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ocean Pollution, and How it Is Affecting
¶ … ocean pollution, and how it is affecting marine life. It will also look at what is being done to control pollution in the United States and around the world.
Research Paper Doctorate
SeaWorld as Sanitized Nature: A Visitor Ethnography
¶ … Seaworld might not seem very adventurous. It might not seem to mean very much of anything at all except for a relatively pleasant - if rather expensive - way to spend an afternoon.
Research Paper Doctorate
Moby Dick and Nature How Nature Displays an Indomitable Force
Moby-Dick, the 1851 novel by Herman Melville, tells a tale of a fanatical Captain expedition for reprisal on a strange whale, which robbed him of his legs. Captain Ahab's pursuit for revenge becomes a fatal and a bitter failure. The self-asserted speaker, Ishmael, signs with Ahab's ship and offer the reader an analysis of the events that takes place besides providing information about the whale's anatomy. In every chapter of the novel, the reader unveils something regarding the temperament of man and his relationship to the nature. The story explores the different links between nature and man. The desire to take revenge against the whale represents one of the negative links between nature and man. Besides, Ahab and the whale, other characters in the narrative appear to hold different means of comprehending and living in the natural world. Some of these characters depict deference for the strength of nature; others are in trepidation of nature while others view nature as an assortment of resources usable for profit. Apparently, nature is crucial and dominant, hence an unconquerable character in the novel. From this prospect, this paper explores the relation between man and nature besides underscoring how nature displays a strong force in the novel. The focus of the paper will be achieved through ascertaining the similarities between Job and Ahab/Ishmael in their refusal and acceptance of supernatural powers, and how vacillating hand of fate contributed in developing the plot of the story.
Essay Doctorate
Maori Renaissance in The Whale Rider and Potiki
Witi Tane Ihimaera's The Whale Rider and Patricia Grace's Potiki are set in Maori communities in New Zealand, and are part of the Renaissance of the Maori language and culture over the last forty years.
Paper Undergraduate
Moby Dick
Herman Melville's novel Moby Dick has been read in countries and language from all over the world. It has been picked apart and analyzed from a plethora of analytical theories and contexts.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Morphology Bottle-Nosed Dolphins and Great
Bottle-Nosed Dolphins and Great White Sharks
Essay Doctorate
Film the Modern Film Is a Genre
Documentaries did not magically appear in the 1920s, they simply took advantage of the emerging technology to form a separate genre. Historians state that early film (pre-1900) showed short events; boats docking, factories, etc. Some filmed surgeries, some medical or physiological issues, all which preserve a slice of reality, but are bursts of information rather than telling a story or filming a process or story that has a significant argument or commentary about society other than pure information