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Costumes
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Costumes occupy a significant place in arts education because they sit at the intersection of visual design, cultural history, and performance. Students encounter this topic in theatre arts, fashion design, film studies, humanities, and cultural history courses. What makes costumes academically compelling is their dual function: they serve immediate production needs by communicating character, period, and social status, while also reflecting broader cultural values and shifts. A single garment can carry a story, signal desire, or draw audience attention in ways that words alone cannot achieve.

The papers collected here approach costumes from several directions. Some focus on scenic and production design, examining how costume choices support a larger visual narrative on stage or screen. Others take a historical angle, tracing developments in ballet, twentieth-century design, or the traditions of events like Trinidad Carnival. Cultural comparison appears as well, with work exploring how Eastern and Western influences meet in contemporary fashion, or how Southeast Asian artistic traditions shape performance aesthetics. Film reviews and humanities event analyses round out the collection, treating costume as one analytical component among music, movement, and mise-en-scène.

A strong essay on costumes needs a focused thesis that connects specific design choices to a larger interpretive claim — about culture, character, or historical change — rather than simply describing what performers wear. Evidence drawn from production history, cultural context, or close visual analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating costume as decorative rather than meaningful; effective essays consistently show how each design decision functions within the broader story or cultural moment being examined.

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Essay Doctorate
Theatre: English-Speaking Versions of Hamlet vs. European
This paper illuminates two different interpretive approaches in 20th century theater by comparing two different ways of staging Shakespeare's Hamlet. It contrasts the more politicized Continental European view of Hamlet as a dissident with the English-speaking theater's view of Hamlet as man with a tortured individual psyche who tragically could not make up his mind.
Essay Doctorate
Kabuki drama: production, historical context, and contemporary performance challenges
This paper discusses the Japanese art dramatic dance form called Kabuki. This was started in 1603 and has been enacted for four hundred years. There are still modern performances of Kabuki which are performed all over the world both in Japanese cultures and in those without an Asian influence whatsoever. This proves that it is still a vialbe art form.
Research Paper Doctorate
Cinematography and Lighting in James Cameron's Titanic
¶ … lighting in the film "Titanic," directed by James Cameron. Specifically, it will discuss the director of photography, Russell Carpenter, and analyze how his lighting helps represent and help the story and characters…
Paper Undergraduate
Aeneid the Ramayana Bacchae Agamemnon Greek Tragedies the Bhagavad Gita
¶ … Aeneas' detachment differ from Rama's?
Paper Doctorate
Transmedia characters and narrative continuity
This essay examines the imperial practice of extraterritoriality in the cross-media character of James Bond. By tracking how Bond exercises extraterritorial liberty across media and time, one is able to see how the justifications for that liberty change. In particular, one can see how the justifications for Bond's extraterritoriality shift from the lingering assumptions of colonial Britain to the overblown rhetoric of the War on Terror.
Paper Masters
Comparison of micro elements in silent films from past and present
Robert Louis Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde has evolved into one of the most acclaimed pieces of modern literature. One aspect of this phenomenon is a continual spark of interest with the novel is motion pictures. Various directors through the years have interpreted the book through their own eyes and the following is a depiction of that. One might question Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde's overwhelming success. Theme restaurants, Broadway shows and movies all have indicated a public interest in the classic. This essay will examine how various cinematic microelements contributed to vastly different artistic productions of approximately the same plot a century apart.
Research Paper Doctorate
Fire Hazards of Trusses
Structures often play the important role when a building is on fire. Upon many reviews, there are a lot of fires claiming for lives of the inhabitants of the building, but there are also some cases, which had taken the…
Essay Doctorate
Mind and the Brain There Are Several
There are several theories that have been proposed for explaining the relationship between one's mind and brain. If truth be told, it can be said that it is one of the most talked about philosophical fields. • Mind vs. Brain Mind and brain are interrelated. For a majority of people, there is no difference between the two. Many scientists and philosophers hold the belief that the brain and the mind are one and are inseparable. These two words are mostly used as alternatives of each other. In general, brain is regarded as a physical object whereas mind is considered as a mental thing (Prabhat, 2011).
Paper Undergraduate
Religious object analysis
The statue of the male god present in the metropolitan museum of art belongs to the New Kingdom period. This statue is of a male God and it is made in the style of the pharaoh Amenhotep III. In one of his fist, the God is seen to be holding a ‘was scepter'. The 'was scepter' is basically a straight staff and has a forked base. The base is capped with an angled horizontal section. The representation that the 'was scepter' provides is of dominion or power. This is seen held by many gods, goddesses and even pharaohs. The other hand, which is seen missing from the status, would have been holding the ankh hieroglyph.
Paper Undergraduate
History of Fashion How to Marry a Millionaire 1953 Monroe
How to Marry a Millionaire is a 1953 romantic comedy set in New York City starring Betty Grable, Marilyn Monroe, and Lauren Bacall, directed by Jean Negulesco. The costumes of the film, as designed by Charles Le Maire,…