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Conformity
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Conformity refers to the process by which individuals adjust their beliefs, behaviors, or attitudes to align with the expectations of a group or broader society. It appears across multiple academic disciplines, including social psychology, sociology, and literature, making it a versatile subject for coursework at both introductory and advanced levels. What makes conformity academically compelling is the tension it creates between the individual and the collective — a tension that touches on questions of identity, autonomy, and social control. Works like One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and philosophical traditions such as Transcendentalism engage directly with this conflict, giving students rich textual material alongside empirical frameworks drawn from social psychology and social influence research.

Student papers on this topic approach conformity from several distinct angles. Some take a social-psychological perspective, examining how group dynamics and social influence shape individual actions. Others use literary analysis, exploring how characters in fiction are shaped or constrained by societal pressure. A smaller set applies the concept to specific cultural contexts, such as the use of steroids in baseball, treating conformity as a lens for understanding behavior within competitive environments. Papers also consider age as a variable affecting conformity, suggesting quantitative and observational methodologies appear alongside more qualitative approaches.

A strong essay on conformity requires a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond simply defining the concept. Effective papers identify a specific context — a social setting, a literary work, or a documented case — and use it to argue something particular about why individuals conform or resist conformity. Evidence drawn from observable behavior, psychological theory, or textual analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating conformity as inherently negative; a nuanced essay acknowledges that conforming can serve legitimate social functions while still examining its costs to individual agency.

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Paper Undergraduate
Anthropology Historical Foundations of Anthropology
How do the methods of 19th Century Evolutionists explain the development of marriage, family, political organization, and religion?
Research Paper Doctorate
Allen Ginsberg: Beat Poet Extraordinare
As one of America's most controversial poets of the mid to late 20th century, Allen Ginsberg, best-known for his radical poem "Howl" and for his outspoken views on American society, politics and the Vietnam War, was a…
Paper Doctorate
Cultural Dimension Theory: Comparing Hofstede, Trompenaars & Schwartz
One of the key changes of the late 20th century, certainly enhanced in the early 21st, is that of the economic, political, and cultural movements that broadly speaking, move the various countries of the world closer…
Paper Undergraduate
Philosophy concepts and principles
What was Nietzsche's purpose in describing the differences between "master morality" and "slave morality"? What does he mean by the difference between "good" vs. "bad" and "good vs.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hebrew Bible: history, texts, and interpretation
Hebrew Bible Viewed Through the Lens of Cultural Anthropology
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ponce de León: explorer and colonial history
¶ … Dreams and the Legacy of Ponce de Leon
Paper Undergraduate
United States History: The 1950s
Many Americans look back on the 1950s with great nostalgia and view America as having been at its best during this decade in history. This work will examine the characteristics of American society during the decade of…
Paper Undergraduate
Cloud SaaS Document Management Risks for Law Firms
¶ … invention of the internet has seen applications being run from remote clouds. The technology referred to as Software as a service (SaaS) is what makes this possible. The applications are specially designed to run as…
Paper Undergraduate
Apple\'s Make vs. Buy Decision
Of the many approaches and techniques Apple could use for recruiting and talent acquisition, by far the most effective are the following three key success factors. First, determining the level of cultural congruence new potential employees have with the organizational climate is critical, followed by the depth of prospect's experiences in specific technical areas where Apple needs expertise to continually create new products. A third is the extent to which a potential new employee can quickly contribute to the unique Apple new product development process (Tariq, Ishrat, Khan, 2011). These three areas are the most important for the success of a new employee. Finding potential employees that meet these three criterion is exceptionally difficult as their combination fo cultural agility and technical skill make them highly sought after in new product development teams (Lynn, 1998). This type of employee is not specifically motivated to join one company over another based on the traditional recruiting advertising, public relations and promotional strategies used by the majority fo Apple's competitors globally. Instead, this is the type of employee who is motivated by autonomy, mastery and purpose in their work and the opportunity to accomplish a visionary product or idea. That vision or mission that many Apple employees share is what also makes their new product development process so effective, quick to respond to the market, and exceptionally high quality in products produced (Tariq, Ishrat, Khan, 2011).
Paper Doctorate
Realm of a Dying Emperor
The Emperor of Japan represents Japanese history and culture, but when Emperor Hirohito died in January of 1989, he had become a symbol for Japan's development into one of the world's largest economic powers. Norma Field, a Japanese-American scholar, examined the role of the Emperor in Japanese society, as well as that society's seeming amnesia toward the man who was at the center of society. Through the stories of three individuals who did not accept the "emperor system" with its revised image of the Japanese Emperor, Field contrasts the extremes in Japanese culture as well as how the image of the Emperor still plays an central role in Japanese society.