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Hypocrisy
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Hypocrisy—the gap between professed beliefs and actual behavior—surfaces as a subject of serious inquiry across ethics, political science, literature, sociology, and religious studies. It interests academics because it cuts to the heart of authenticity, moral authority, and social trust. Students encounter the topic in courses on political philosophy, where founding documents and institutions claim high ideals while contradicting them in practice, and in literary studies, where authors from Charles Dickens to Oscar Wilde to Voltaire construct characters and societies whose stated values betray their actions. The tension between justice and behavior, between what citizens are promised and what they receive, gives the topic lasting relevance.

The papers archived here approach hypocrisy from several distinct angles. Literary analyses examine how works by Dickens, Wycherley, Oscar Wilde, Zora Neale Hurston, and Flannery O'Connor use irony and characterization to expose moral contradiction. Historical and political essays interrogate figures like Thomas Jefferson and documents like the Declaration of Independence, where proclamations of freedom coexisted with slavery. Other papers take sociological or institutional approaches, scrutinizing corporate social responsibility, church leadership, racial identity in texts like Caucasia by Danzy Senna, and the treatment of women in Voltaire's Candide. Together these angles show that hypocrisy operates at personal, institutional, and national levels simultaneously.

A strong essay on hypocrisy needs a focused thesis that identifies a specific actor, text, or institution and explains the consequences of the contradiction it embodies. Evidence drawn from primary sources—speeches, literary passages, policy documents—carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating hypocrisy as simple name-calling; effective essays instead analyze why the gap between belief and behavior persists and what it reveals about power, self-interest, or social structure.

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Paper Doctorate
Piaf, Pam Gems provides a view into
in "Piaf," Pam Gems provides a view into the life of the great French singer and arguably the greatest singer of her generation -- Edith Piaf. (Fildier and Primack, 1981), the slices that the playwright provides, more…
Paper Undergraduate
Lactantius and Constantine in the fourth century
The changing role of perceptions of secular authority in relation to Christian teachings
Paper Undergraduate
Social justice themes in the book of Micah
The paper stipulates the issue of social justice as outlined in the Bible. It takes a particular interest in the book of Micah and outlines the instances that God is seen cautioning the Israelite to do justice to their neighbors and the consequences that would come if they never obeyed such instructions.
Research Paper Doctorate
Flannery O \'Connor Flannery O\'Connnor:
Flannery O'Connnor: Of Darkness and Salvation
Paper Undergraduate
White Man\'s Burden; Black Man\'s
¶ … White Man's Burden; Black Man's Sorrow" and "There's a European, There's a European!." I chose these two articles because of the juxtapositions they offer with regards to the impacts of European imperialism in Africa.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Jane Eyre
Emily Bronte, one of the foremost Victorian era writes wrote her seminal work "Jane Eyre" as a form of Bildungsroman, or a novel that tells the story of a child's maturation process, focusing on the emotions and…
Paper Undergraduate
Guess Who\'s Coming to Dinner?
The film "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" presents a critically acclaimed story about a Caucasian woman brining home -- unannounced -- an African-American man she has fallen in love with.
Paper Undergraduate
Wind Done Gone: A Legitimate
¶ … Wind Done Gone: A legitimate parody, not a violation of copyright law
Paper Undergraduate
Poetic explication and literary analysis
¶ … wrath as something belonging to someone else. We want to think of ourselves as a people capable of controlling our emotions because we are human. William Blake forces us to look at the truth of this supposition,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Giovanni Boccaccio: life, works, and literary influence
The Black Death of 1348 forms the background to Boccaccio's Decameron; a group of ten young high-born citizens of Florence -- seven women and three men -- flee the city to escape the disease and take refuge in the…