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Artifact
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An artifact, in its broadest academic sense, is any object, text, or cultural product created or shaped by human hands that carries historical, social, or symbolic significance. Historians, anthropologists, and cultural studies scholars treat artifacts as primary evidence for understanding how societies functioned, what people valued, and how meaning was constructed across time and place. The topic appears across disciplines including history, rhetoric, education, and cultural studies, making it a versatile subject that invites students to think critically about the relationship between material objects and the societies that produced them.

The papers collected here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some focus on cultural analysis, examining artifacts tied to specific traditions such as African cultural objects and what they reveal about identity and community life. Others take a rhetorical angle, treating media products as artifacts worthy of close interpretive reading. Educational frameworks also appear, with students exploring portfolio artifacts and the rationales behind selecting them. Historical interpretation is another prominent thread, with writers working through how to read physical or documentary objects as evidence of past knowledge and practice.

A strong essay on artifacts grounds its thesis in a specific object or category and connects its physical or formal qualities to broader social or historical context. Evidence drawn from close observation of the artifact itself, combined with relevant cultural or historical background, tends to carry the most weight. One common pitfall is treating an artifact as self-explanatory — strong analysis always explains not just what an artifact is, but what it does, what it meant to its original context, and why that meaning matters now.

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Paper Undergraduate
Media worlds and their cultural impacts
According to Erika Engstrom: "because there are no legal rules for the wedding as a social event itself, wedding media such as found in The Knot's offerings provide informal, though structured, instruction (etiquette)…
Essay Masters
Beauty and Sadness in Japanese Literature
This essay examines the idea of social mobility and class difference in Higuchi Ichiyo's "Growing Up" by focusing on how each characters' life is entirely controlled by their family's social status. Although the children in the story believe that they live in a world of their own, with their own interests and rivalries, in reality their lives are a direct result of their social status and economic class. Thus, the story suggests that growing up is not so much a process of becoming an adult, but rather a process of realizing that the division between childhood and adulthood is largely a myth.
Research Paper Doctorate
Econometrics concepts and applications
Can manipulating Currency Rates effectively reduce inflation?
Research Paper Doctorate
Intasc I Artifact: The Sweet Hereafter: Novel
ARTIFACT: THE SWEET HEREAFTER: Novel compared to the Movie
Research Paper Undergraduate
Larry Beck and Ted Cable\'s
¶ … Larry Beck and Ted Cable's text entitled Interpretation in the 21st Century: Fifteen Guiding Principles for Interpreting Nature and Culture, a succient yet accurate definition of interpretation is as follows: an…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Raymond Williams Keyword: Raymond Williams\'
Keyword: Raymond Williams' Definition of Culture
Research Paper Undergraduate
Sarah Vowell: biography and literary analysis
Guns, Presidents, and Sarah Vowell's Assassination Vacation
Paper Undergraduate
Music and psychology: exploring power and effects
The power and importance of music from a psychological and philosophical standpoint has been discussed and explored in many studies and theses. The saying that music has the power to "calm the savage beast" refers to…
Paper Undergraduate
Leadership Development and School Improvement Strategies
Leadership Development and School Improvement
Paper Doctorate
Using the Museum as a Medium How Museums Function as a Medium in Paris France
Paris, France is one of the world’s most rich cities, bubbling with cultural richness, unique tastes in art, literature and architecture. Whether a tourist or a resident, the museums of Paris are a must see for everyone. There are about one thousand two hundred museums in Paris with each and every one of them having their own tale to tell. The subject of display also greatly varies from art (modern, contemporary, graphic, and many more), submarines, architecture, history, textiles, and so much more. Among these popular museums in one of the most famous art museum, the Louvre (Witcomb).