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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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Research Paper Undergraduate
Stonehenge, Located in Salisbury Plain,
¶ … Stonehenge, located in Salisbury Plain, England, has been a source of public curiosity, professional debate and even controversy. What, the question has been asked again and again, is Stonehenge; when the question…
Paper Undergraduate
Nheengatu: A Not-So Dead Language
There has been a recent drive to preserve so-called dead languages. A dead language "is a language which is no longer learned as a native language," which means that it is a language that has usually become static and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Rights of Biological and Adoptive
¶ … Rights of Biological and Adoptive Parents
Research Paper Undergraduate
Native American Art Post-War Native
To evaluate the impact that Native American art has had on the evolution of late Modernism - and vice versa - is not an easy task. It was only in the 1930s that art critics and historians began paying attention to…
Paper Undergraduate
Gender attitudes in "I Want a Wife" and "Uncle Sam and Aunt Samantha
¶ … wife" by Judy Brady and "Uncle Sam and Aunt Samantha" by Anna Quindlen
Paper Undergraduate
An artwork by Michael Hamson
Art analysis: Mandang Province wood bowl from Michael Hamson's collection
Research Paper Undergraduate
Protestant Ethic and the Evolution
Maximilian Weber was one of the most influential German political economists and sociologists. He began his career at the University of Berlin and later worked at other universities throughout Germany.
Paper Doctorate
Nature Imitates Art Imitating Nature
In Oscar Wilde's the Decay of Lying, one character, Vivian, claims that life and nature imitate art far more than art imitates either life or nature. This is of course dubious to the extreme, so much so that it is very…
Paper Undergraduate
Stickball: A Window Into America\'s
Stickball: A Window Into America's Cultural Adolescence
Paper Undergraduate
Research designs and methodology in psychology: advanced qualitative methods
¶ … Hermeneutical Analysis of Psychotherapy as a Cultural Artifact: