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Wind
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Wind as a subject of academic study spans multiple disciplines, from earth sciences and physical geology to literature, film studies, and environmental policy. In science courses, wind is examined as a meteorological and geological force — its role in shaping landforms, driving weather systems, and influencing natural ecosystems. In humanities courses, wind appears as a rich symbolic and narrative element, with works like Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind and Ursula K. Le Guin's The Other Wind prompting analysis of how authors and filmmakers use wind as a thematic device. Its intersection with energy policy and green energy debates also makes it relevant in economics and environmental studies courses.

The essays archived here reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Some take a historical and evaluative angle, examining the accuracies and inaccuracies in the 1939 film Gone With the Wind and its representations of southern history and African Americans. Others focus on literary symbolism, tracing what wind signifies in narrative settings like the city of Atlanta. Additional papers address practical and policy concerns, including local wind types, renewable energy generation, and the environmental benefits of green energy. Descriptive and creative writing exercises also appear, using wind as a vehicle for practicing observational detail.

A strong essay on wind should establish a focused thesis that commits to one discipline's framework — conflating scientific analysis with literary interpretation weakens both. Evidence drawn from geological data, specific textual passages, or documented policy outcomes carries more weight than general claims. The most common pitfall is treating wind too abstractly; grounding the argument in concrete examples, whether a specific landform, a scene from a text, or a measurable energy statistic, keeps the analysis credible and precise.

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Essay Doctorate
Stand Proud as You Can See, I\'ve
¶ … stand proud as you can see, I've survived and thrived and lived
Research Paper Doctorate
Death and the Maiden
Ariel Dorfman's play Death and the Maiden and Roman Polanski's movie of the same name lead the audience to believe that Paulina's accusations. Dorfman's use of sound directions and spare set directions create an…
Research Paper Doctorate
Literature review and analysis
¶ … Shipping News by Annie Proulx tells the story of Quoyle, a man who begins the book naive, buffeted by life, and passive, but by the end has earned his place in a small town in Newfoundland.
Research Paper Doctorate
Deer hunting practices and methods
¶ … Morning, and I'm riding in the back of my Dad's old Jimmy, dust-covered and bone-cold in the darkness. We're making our way past out of the driveway, and I'm still groggy from the alarm's harsh call.
Paper Undergraduate
Historical Development of Feng Shui in China
An historical overview of the development of the practice of feng shui in China and particularly in Hong Kong, where feng shui is practiced more than it is on the Mainland.
Essay Doctorate
The goddess Anre and her eight stellar children in Telzah
In the most ancient times when Men had yet to assert their dominion over the Earth and its inhabitants, and vengeful Gods still controlled the destiny of all creatures, the land of Telzah was ruled by the goddess Anre. As beautiful as she was benevolent, Anre was beloved throughout Tezlah and the people’s devotion to her extended even beyond her land’s borders. Rather than use her awesome powers to extinguish life wantonly and enjoy herself at humanity’s expense, habits her fellow gods and goddesses had long grown accustomed to, Anre was known far and wide for her willingness to aid the injured and assist the fallen. Tales were often told of encountering Anre on one’s travels, the extraordinary beauty of her earthly visage belying her any attempt to conceal her divinity, and invariably these stories ended with the provision of food and water, or protection from bandits and beasts. While the details of each encounter were always different, every person to receive Anre’s charity remembered the same ethereal smile, and the same refusal to accept recompense for her efforts.
Research Paper Doctorate
Roots of Wiccan Music, the Instruments Used
¶ … roots of Wiccan music, the instruments used and how the music moves participants into meditative states.
Research Paper Doctorate
Webster\'s \'Sense of an Elite Woman\'s Place
¶ … Webster's 'Sense of an Elite Woman's Place in the World' in the Duchess of Malfi and the White Devil
Essay Doctorate
Lewis Clark Patrick Gass the Problem Interpretation Communication Encountered Explorers Indians Expedition
When Thomas Jefferson wrote Meriwether Louis on June 30, 1803 to instruct upon some of the conditions that the pending expedition imposed, he made several relevant considerations. The president emphasized that it was an important objective of the mission that knowledge should be acquired in regards to the people who inhabited the target regions of the expedition.
Paper Undergraduate
Out of the House of Bondage: Plantation Household Power Review
This book views the plantation homes as a place of production where rival dreams of gender were exercised as weapons in class brawls that were among the black and white women. Mistresses were influential beings in the chain of command of slavery rather than immobilized victims of the same patriarchal structure accountable for the domination of those that were in slavery. Glymph tests accepted descriptions of plantation mistresses as " allies " and "friends" of slaves and sheds some light on the political position of apparent private struggles, and on the political programs at work in enclosing the domestic as private and household associations as personal.