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Ancient
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The ancient world spans a vast range of civilizations, practices, and ideas that historians, classicists, and religious studies scholars examine to understand how human societies first took organized shape. Courses in world history, art history, religious studies, and political science all draw on ancient sources, asking students to investigate how early cultures established governance, belief systems, trade, medicine, and artistic expression. What makes this period academically compelling is the tension between how remote these societies feel and how directly their structures, philosophies, and conflicts continue to shape contemporary life.

Papers on this topic approach the ancient world from several angles. Some focus on specific civilizations or regions, such as Classical and Hellenistic Greece, the Etruscan world, or the Ancient Near East, often through comparative or art-historical analysis. Others trace particular practices — fermentation, fasting, traditional medicine, or musical instruments like the panpipes — across cultural contexts. Religious experience, including Jewish diaspora, Christian ritual, and Roman Catholicism, also features prominently, as does the long reach of ancient literary traditions visible in works like Gilgamesh. Some essays take a broader theoretical stance, asking whether modern understandings of nature or power align more closely with ancient frameworks than with later periods such as the Renaissance.

A strong essay on the ancient world needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey. Evidence drawn from primary sources, archaeological records, or well-established historical frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "ancient" as a monolithic category — successful essays specify a civilization, time period, or practice and resist collapsing distinct cultures into a single narrative.

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Paper Undergraduate
Origins of the Holy Grail
The Holy Grail has become one of the iconic tales of the Arthurian saga, immortalized in books, poetry, and film. Scholars of the early 20th century assumed that the popularity of the tale meant that it must have some…
Paper Undergraduate
Holy saturation: religious symbolism and visual intensity
The traditional, or Orthodox view, is that the church is a necessary medium between the laity and God, and that without the church and the hierarchy of clergy, the congregation would be unable to attain the wisdom of God.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Subcontracting Analysis (Cont\'d) What Factors
What factors should be evaluated when selecting a subcontractor? What are the typical methods used to evaluate these factors and are these methods effective?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Romantic view of women in nineteenth-century literature
The Romantic period in English literature is usually considered to extend from 1798, when Wordsworth and Coleridge published their Lyrical Ballads, to 1832, when Sir Walter Scott died (Abrams et al.
Paper Undergraduate
Cultural Differences and Symbolic Interpretation
Social learning is one of the most important determinants of the way that human beings interpret behavior and symbolism and is capable of inspiring completely opposite responses to identical experiences (Gerrig &…
Research Paper Doctorate
Joseph Smith and the Book
Joseph Smith, Jr. was the fourth child of Joseph Sr. And Lucy Smack and born in Sharon, Vermont on December 23, 1805. The Smith family lived under arduous and unstable financial circumstances that compelled them to move…
Paper Undergraduate
Family vs. Society in Sophocles\'
Many dramas show the turmoil within a family regarding the rights course of action. Often, the problem is one where what is good for the family is not good for an individual in the family, or the individual has selfish…
Paper Doctorate
Omnivore\'s Dilemma \"What Should We
"What should we have for dinner?" It is the question Michael Pollan asks at the beginning of his book, The Omnivore's Dilemma. Pollan wrote the book partly in response to the "carbophobia" that seized the nation soon…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Weapons of Mass Destruction Before
The term 'weapons of mass destruction' was allegedly first used in a report by the London Times in 1937. The report was a description of a German air force attack on the town of Guernica in Spain which "...
Paper Undergraduate
Concert attendance and performance analysis
The performance that I chose to attend was the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's Special performance of the Inca Trail. This performance was chosen because it differs from their usual baroque and classical faire.