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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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Paper Doctorate
Blazing Saddles and the Toy Story connection
An analysis of how issues of race and social class are depicted in comedy films such as Blazing Saddles and The Toy. It is argued that commentary on race and class in Blazing Saddles is successful because of the film's narrative and satirical structure, which depicts blacks in a positive light and gives them upward social mobility. On the other hand, The Toy is unsuccessful at commenting on these issues because it not only degrades the protagonist through voluntary slavery, thus depicting downward social mobility of blacks, but also depicts whites as entitled, power-hungry megalomaniacs.
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.
Paper Undergraduate
Swift and Pope: Satirizing Death in Enlightenment Poetry
This is a five-page paper about Jonathan Swift's "Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift" and Alexander Pope's "Epistle to Arbuthnot." The essay is about what motivated these two poets to write their respective poems. The central idea of the paper is that both poets were motivated by a desire to confront death, but in a way characteristic of their penchant for satire. The poems celebrate their lives and the lives of their friends.
Essay Undergraduate
Fennimore Cooper\'s Literary Offenses
This is an essay that looks at Mark Twain's essay "Fennimore Cooper's Literary Offenses". Twain tries to use humor and accuracy to show the reader that James Fennimore Cooper, one of America's revered early writers, was very inaccurate in the books he wrote called the Leather Stocking Tales. Twain is right about the structural inaccuracies, but does not give Cooper the credit he deserves for being an innovator.
Paper High School
Kitchen debates and Cold War diplomacy
Both Nixon and Khrushchev were notorious in their respective country’s political arena for speaking bluntly and allowing their tempers to take control of the conversation – and as the pair toured the exhibition’s display of a “typical” modern American home kitchen, the stage was set for each man to engage in brash behavior and braggadocio. By examining the actual transcripts of the Kitchen Debate and focusing on the childishly combative manner in which each man reacts to another, it is possible to gain a greater understanding as to how petty motivations and personal grievances can conspire to embroil nations in open warfare while threatening the world’s collective welfare. Despite their shared stature as key figures in the leadership apparatus of global superpowers which were increasingly at odds from a foreign relations perspective, both Nixon and Khrushchev made little effort to conceal their animosity and disdain for one another’s worldview. The careful concealment of emotion that is typical to high-level diplomatic conferences was quickly abandoned by the infamously emotional leaders, and the result was a conversation which quickly devolved into a schoolyard-style confrontation between a bully and his upstart nemesis.
Paper Doctorate
Comparative analysis of two Peter Lovesey novels
Mystery novels have a habit of portraying murder as a discrete affair for the middle class. Nowhere is this more apparent than in English mystery novels, as novel writers in England, being a literate caste, usually…
Paper Masters
Pres Debate the October 3rd
President Obama was given the opportunity to give the first response in this debate, and immediately the practiced and purposeful use of techniques in his speech became clear. He looks directly at the camera, which is…
Paper Undergraduate
Close Reading of Scudder's "Look at Your Fish" (1874)
Scudder's thesis is direct, yet it comes at the conclusion of the work. The writing has a basic formality in structure and formatting while it may be slightly less formal in its content. Scudder does not write to persuade his audience; readers infer from the tone that the author's intent is to share a moment in education that influence the author personally, professionally, and academically for years to come. Scudder successfully conveys a "teaching moment" he had with a professor because of his tone, organization, and succinct writing.
Research Paper Doctorate
Globalization of Agriculture, Food Production, and Resources
The Ideology and the Reality of Food Production and Agriculture
Paper Doctorate
Comparing themes and literary devices in Faulkner's stories
William Faulkner's short stories were told by an omniscient narrator who probably represented the author, and in plot, characters and symbolism have often been classified of Southern Gothic horror.