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Arts
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The arts encompass a broad range of human creative expression, including visual art, music, theatre, cinema, and architecture. Students across disciplines — from art history and cultural studies to political science and education — are asked to write about the arts because the field raises fundamental questions about how societies represent, critique, and understand themselves. Papers on this topic explore everything from the patronage systems of the Renaissance, as seen in the role of the Medici family, to the development of European art music within westernization movements, making it a subject with deep historical and cross-cultural dimensions.

The papers archived here reflect a wide variety of approaches. Historical and biographical analysis appears frequently, with studies of individual artists such as Jacob van Ruisdael and Toulouse-Lautrec grounding broader arguments in specific careers and movements. Formal analysis is another common method, asking writers to examine compositional and structural elements within a single work. Other papers take a policy angle, such as arguments surrounding the National Endowment for the Arts, while still others use cultural criticism to connect artistic production to social forces — linking cinema's early development between 1900 and 1929 to shifting public life, or examining Harold Pinter's theatre in relation to Aristotelian dramatic conventions.

A strong essay on the arts begins with a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond simple description to make an arguable claim about meaning, influence, or value. Evidence drawn from close formal observation, historical context, or documented cultural impact tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating art as mere illustration of a social trend rather than analyzing it on its own terms as a constructed, deliberate object worthy of sustained critical attention.

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Paper High School
Ovid\'s Influence on European Art
Ovid is renowned as one the foremost poets of antiquity. He is best known for his work Metamorphoses, which has been described as "…a masterpiece on Greek and Roman myths."
Paper Undergraduate
Pablo Neruda's influence and contributions to politics
Pablo Neruda is synonymous with the people's political, cultural, and literary movements of mid twentieth century Chile. Poet, diplomat, Nobel Prize winner, politician and pundit, Neruda filled the roles that he…
Paper Undergraduate
Secular humanism: philosophy, values, and worldview
The rise and influence of Secular Humanism in the 20th century
Paper Undergraduate
Identity Construction in Literary Texts
Representasie Van Kleurling Identiteit In Geselekteerde Tekste
Paper Doctorate
Homosexuality in Korea (ROK) There
There are two, seemingly identical, questions to be asked regarding homosexuality in any given society experiencing a flooding of gays: Why didn't they come out before, and why are they coming out now?
Paper Undergraduate
Psychological Sequelae of Childhood Sexual
The fact of childhood sexual abuse has become a central area of concern in countries throughout the world and has been described by experts as a "...major public health problem affecting thousands of children and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Music and movement in early childhood education
Over the past decade, researchers have paid increasing amount of interest to the impact of music on child development. For example, in 1993 Alfred a. Tomatis coined the term "The Mozart effect" for the alleged increase…
Paper Undergraduate
Danielle Green-Byrd in the Face
In the face of tragedy, the human being survives. This is a generalized truth - that our species is nothing if not a survivor. How else could we have prevailed in the ultimate predator contest over the vast millennia of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Women Are Portrayed in Late
Throughout history, women have served as the subjects of compelling and poignant works of art, reflecting in large part how society viewed them and what roles they were expected to play.
Paper Undergraduate
Cultural Events From the Past
Postimpressionism reflects the art-for-art's sake spirit, while H.G. Wells debated that novels should be a sort of lecture, have morals, that they should affect the people who read them.