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Characterization
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Characterization is the craft by which writers construct fictional and narrative personas, revealing personality, motivation, and moral complexity through action, dialogue, and description. It sits at the center of literary studies courses, from introductory composition to upper-level seminars, because understanding how characters are built is fundamental to interpreting any text. Works such as Flannery O'Connor's "Revelation" and "A Good Man Is Hard to Find," Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol, Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, and Jean-Paul Sartre's No Exit appear frequently in academic writing precisely because their characters embody larger questions about identity, morality, family, and the human condition.

Student papers on this topic approach characterization from several angles. Literary analysis papers examine how specific characters evolve across a narrative arc, tracing the relationship between a character's inner life and external conflict. Comparative essays set characters from different works against one another to highlight contrasting techniques or thematic concerns. Some papers ground their analysis in a single story or play, offering close readings of pivotal scenes, while others engage memoirs and personal essays — such as Bernard Cooper's "A Clack of Tiny Sparks" — where the line between character and real-life subject becomes a point of critical inquiry.

A strong essay on characterization begins with a focused thesis that connects a specific technique — such as indirect characterization through dialogue or the use of foils — to a broader interpretive claim about the work's meaning. Textual evidence drawn directly from the narrative carries the most weight, particularly passages that reveal character through action or relationship rather than simple description. The most common pitfall is summarizing what a character does rather than analyzing how and why the author constructs them that way.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Marriage of Heaven and Hell
Opposite Attraction: What the World Needs Now William Blake's "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell"
Research Paper Doctorate
Cold War Era Films
Many films about the cold war era, especially the early films, speak out against its ideals, while others support these ideals. Below is a consideration of selected Cold War era films, and how these were influenced by…
Research Paper Doctorate
Drama literature: history, themes, and analysis
¶ … Fences (Wilson, 1986) August Wilson, one of America's preeminent black playwrights presents the mercurial nature of one, Troy Maxson. Not much effort is needed before the real and metaphorical fences become evident.
Research Paper Doctorate
Recycling: How it Improves Our Environment Most
Most individuals in today's society know that recycling plays an important role in managing the waste generated in homes and businesses, and that it reduces the need for landfills and incinerators.
Thesis Undergraduate
Testing theory and applications
Public Safety Networks supported by information and communication technology infrastructure, are products of one or more characteristics of their member agencies, which aggregate to complicated network behavior thereby…
Research Paper Doctorate
Heart of Darkness
¶ … Heart of Darkness, by Joseph Conrad [...] roll of women in this novella. How are they represented? What sort of comments are made about women "in general"? Women in "Heart of Darkness" play an important and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Literature and religion: intersections and influences
Breakdown and Reconstruction of Characters' Faith in the Poisonwood Bible
Thesis Masters
In the Belly of the Beast by Kesey
Jack Henry Abbot's In the Belly of the Beast is an unusual literary document. The book is comprised of letters sent originally to the novelist and chauvinist Norman Mailer, in an effort to give Mailer some corroborative…
Paper Masters
Mary Higgins Clark, Where Are You Now?
Mary Higgins Clark's novel Where Are You Now? catches the attention of even the casual browser in a library or bookstore with its unusual -- and effective -- title. Readers of fiction are accustomed to novels that…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Symbolism and Justice in August Wilson's Fences
This play examines the use of symbolism in August Wilson's Fences, and argues that the symbols all correlate to the theme of injustice in Wilson's play. Baseball is used as a symbol of the injustice of segregation, but crucially the play's setting after baseball segregation has ended does not fill the protagonist, Troy Maxson, with gratitude, but bitterness. As a result Troy perpetuates the injustice against his own son, when the boy is offered a football scholarship. Finally the most expansive symbol in the play--that of the injured Gabe and his belief that he must use his trumped to announce the Last Judgment--demonstrates, in the play's conclusion, that Wilson's purpose is to ask us to imagine a transcendent justice, in which the wrongs done against Troy, and the wrongs done by him, can be evaluated in the context of history.