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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
Neo-Aristotelian Criticism in September 2005,
This essay examines Jane Fonda's 2005 keynote speech at the Women & Power conference from the perspective of Neo-Aristotelian criticism. By analyzing Fonda's speech according to the five canons of rhetoric, one is able to see how seemingly problematic details do not detract from the persuasive ability of the speaker. The essay demonstrates the centrality of context to any rhetorical analysis, because the environment of the speech and the specific audience often are as important, if not more so, than the speaker herself.
Essay Doctorate
Mobile Phone Ad Rhetorical Analysis: Nokia N-Series
Advertisements, like other man-made artifacts, utilize the concepts of logos, ethos, and pathos to persuade its target audience to subscribe to the idea or message presented in it. Ads are just one of the many artifacts…
Paper High School
G.F. Handel George Frideric Handel
It is difficult to find anyone familiar with Western culture who does not know of Handel's Messiah. Even if they do not know it by name, all one need do is hum a few bars of the "Hallelujah Chorus" and they will start…
Research Paper Undergraduate
The Renaissance and Reformation
Discovering the hidden time capsule, I found ten (10) items in it. As a cultural anthropologist, I tried to determine the nature of these items, and found out that these items were reminiscent of the cultures prevalent…
Paper Doctorate
Social-Conflict and Good Will Hunting Social-Conflict Theory
Social-Conflict theory espouses the belief that that conflict is a basic aspect of life and can never be fully resolved. According to this approach formal agencies of social control merely coerce the disenfranchised to…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Postmodern phenomenon and contemporary cultural shifts
What formal and spatial qualities characterize postmodern architecture? What is the relationship of postmodern architecture and classicism? How does this relate to the socio-political context within which postmodern…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Review: Holocaust by Angela Gluck
Review: Holocaust by Angela Gluck Wood For some who are living today, the memories of the Holocaust, life during the time of the Holocaust or the experiences which would reverberate from it even decades later are still…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Stories of Art by James Elkins: A Critical Book Review
Elkins, James. Stories of Art. Routledge, 2002.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Group Communications African Art: Woyo
What we think of as 'art' in a Western context is often taken to mean the type of art that is apprehended in a museum. Art viewed as such is not functional; rather it is decorative or expressive, like a sculpture or a…
Paper Undergraduate
Interpretation in Archaeology
Archaeology is one of the academic disciplines that have undergone major changes in its history. Like many disciplines, it is an evolution of paradigm, by means of which the study of the past is both facilitated and…