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Humorous
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Humor as a subject of academic study appears across English courses in composition, rhetoric, and literature. Students write about it because humor is both a literary mode and a rhetorical strategy — a deliberate craft choice that shapes how readers receive an argument or story. Works like Aristophanes' Lysistrata and Virgil's Aeneid demonstrate that comic and satirical registers have been central to serious writing for centuries, and contemporary texts continue that tradition. Understanding how humor functions helps students analyze tone, audience awareness, and the relationship between writer and reader more precisely than surface-level reading allows.

The papers archived here approach humor from several directions. Some perform rhetorical analysis, examining how writers deploy comic techniques to persuade or engage — including analyses of speeches, advertisements, and essays such as Amy Tan's "Mother Tongue." Others take a literary approach, contrasting texts or reading works like In a Sunburned Country to consider how a humorous voice shapes nonfiction narrative. Still others treat humor as a practical mode, studying or producing humorous speeches and evaluating what makes writing feel lively and interesting to a reader. A smaller set of papers explores humor in relation to broader cultural or social topics, from media to personal experience.

A strong essay on humor grounds its claims in specific textual evidence — particular word choices, structural decisions, or rhetorical techniques — rather than simply asserting that something is funny. A well-scoped thesis identifies which type of humor is at work and explains what effect it produces on the reader. The most common pitfall is treating humor as decoration rather than as argument, which causes analysis to stay shallow. Humor almost always serves a purpose beyond entertainment, and strong essays pursue that purpose directly.

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Essay Doctorate
Cross Cultural Leadership Cultural Differences in Leadership
Cultural differences determine certain leadership traits and portions of our personality. It is easy to discredit the importance of cross-cultural differences and their influences on various leadership styles.
Paper Undergraduate
Fiction Analysis of Passage From
Analysis of passage from Catch-22, by Joseph Heller (Originally published in 1955. New York: Dell Publishing, Inc., 1963)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Mark Twain's Jumping Frog: Humor, Folklore, and Legacy
As many an author has found, a reputation can change overnight just based on one novel or short story. It may not even be something that the writer particularly likes best or thought was an important piece.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hypochondria: causes, symptoms, and clinical management
You're such a hypochondriac!" The symptoms of hypochondriasis, the formal diagnostic term for hypochondria, have entered the popular vocabulary to such a degree that the condition has become the punch line of jokes, and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Conflict Management Conflict Within Any
Conflict within any situation, especially in the workplace, can be seen as a natural occurrence which usually reflects differences in views and personal style.
Research Paper Doctorate
Conspicuous Consumption the Relationship Between Luxury Purchase
Conspicuous consumption is a complex concept that requires a great deal of quandary. Conspicuous consumption is often thought of as unnecessary spending or the purchasing of products that are not necessities.
Paper Doctorate
Writers' emotional responses to central characters in literature
In a great deal of literature, especially prior to the modern and postmodern periods, the central characters or protagonists are generally expected to be supported by the reader -- they are individuals that the authors…
Paper Masters
Lords of Strategy by Walter
The Lords of Strategy by Walter Kiechel is an examination of how and American enterprise shifted from a philosophy of scientific management (what Kiechel calls 'Taylorism') to the current favored emphasis on external…
Paper Undergraduate
Family:\' Familial Love in Literature
While romantic, erotic, and even platonic (friendly) love may vary in their significance across cultures, it is difficult to name a society that does not give great significance to familial love.
Research Paper Doctorate
King Pest, One of Edgar
King Pest, one of Edgar Allen Poe's least popular short stories, is set in the fourteenth century during the reign of King Edward III in England. With the Bubonic plague as a backdrop, and with a progressively more…