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Ceremony
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Ceremony as an academic subject appears across disciplines including anthropology, religious studies, cultural studies, and literature. Students encounter it in courses that examine how human communities mark meaning through structured ritual, whether in everyday social life or major life transitions. What makes ceremony academically compelling is its dual nature: it operates as both a deeply personal experience for individuals and families and a collective expression of cultural identity. Papers in this area often engage with the significance of ceremonial forms across vastly different societies, exploring how ceremonies organize social relationships, reinforce values, and connect generations. Works like Leslie Silko's 1977 novel Ceremony bring these questions into literary analysis, while ethnographic traditions applied to groups such as the Mbuti or the Enga people ground the subject in fieldwork and primary cultural research.

The papers gathered here approach ceremony from several angles. Comparative analysis is common, as seen in work examining the similarities and differences between a Kinaaldá and a Quinceañera—two coming-of-age ceremonies rooted in distinct cultural traditions. Historical and cultural overviews appear as well, covering topics like world music culture and Egyptian funerary texts. Other papers take a focused case-study approach, looking at same-sex marriage, cultural wedding practices, or Native American expressive culture to examine how ceremony functions within specific communities and changing social contexts.

A strong essay on ceremony builds a clear thesis about what a specific ceremonial form reveals—about identity, power, family, or cultural continuity—rather than simply describing its steps. Evidence drawn from ethnographies, primary texts, or close literary analysis carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating ceremony as mere tradition without analyzing its living significance for the individuals and communities who practice it.

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Paper Undergraduate
Leadership Style Made Abraham Lincoln
I have chosen Abraham Lincoln as the subject of this research for several reasons: one, he is one of the most revered and respected leaders in the history of the country; two, he is the man who emancipated the slaves…
Paper Undergraduate
The spirit catches you and you fall down
As a cultural anthropologist, this author has become very familiar with the Lao Hmong. They are a very small minority southeast Asian minority group that has lived in the United States since the close of the Vietnam War.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Film and literature comparison across media
The Haunting of Ethnic Writers: Sula and the Sixth Sense, a Literature-Film Comparison
Research Paper Undergraduate
Kinaalda and Quinceanera the Kinaalda
The Kinaalda is a Navajo initiation ceremony in which a young woman, when she has her first menstruation, is ceremonially brought into the social life of the tribe and the community because she has reached puberty.
Paper High School
Fra Filippo Lippi's portrait of a woman with a man at a casement
The purpose of the present paper is to discuss a very interesting piece of art, namely, Fra Filippo Lippi's "Portrait of a woman with a man at a Casement." We will begin by the analysis of the formal qualities of the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ethical conflicts in the Tuskegee syphilis study
In 1928, the U.S. Public Health Service or PHS collaborated with the Rosenwald Fund charity organization of Chicago to help improve the health of African-Americans in the South (WorldNow 2007).
Paper Undergraduate
Anglican and Reformation Theology Comparison
Among the bewildering number of Christian theologies, the Reformation and Anglican varieties have had an immense influence through the centuries. Begun around the same time in the sixteenth century's response to the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Australian Aboriginal Culture: Society, Religion & Change
Like the indigenous peoples of many continents and countries, the Australian Aborigines faced a dramatic change in lifestyle with the arrival of the British colonists. Some of these changes still manifest themselves…
Paper Undergraduate
The rhythm of pastoral care and counseling throughout time
Kevin Massey observes that "ritual has a profound capacity to provide pastoral care…Gesture and action in ritual deliver spiritual support in ways that can provide hope and healing" (4).
Paper Undergraduate
Comanche Indians: history, culture, and society
Comanche Indians a derivative of the Eastern Shoshoni, lived on the Southern Great Plains of the U.S. during the 1800-1900s. The name "Comanche," is believed to come from the Spanish "interpretation" of their Ute name…