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Opera
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Opera is a dramatic art form that combines music, theater, and often dance into large-scale staged productions. Students encounter it across courses in music history, performing arts, theater studies, and cultural studies. What makes opera academically compelling is the way it sits at the intersection of multiple disciplines — its development reflects shifts in public taste, patronage, and cultural identity. Works like Rigoletto and Don Giovanni, including its aria "Madamina," offer rich material for analysis, as does the output of celebrated performers such as Luciano Pavarotti, whose career illustrates how opera reaches broad public audiences.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on specific works or composers, examining productions of pieces like Rigoletto or Benjamin Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream through literary and musical analysis. Others investigate the collaborative relationship between opera composers and librettists, treating that creative partnership as central to understanding how operas come to life on stage. Review-based essays draw on live concert and theater attendance, grounding arguments in direct audience experience. A smaller set of papers situates opera within broader cultural contexts, connecting it to institutions and movements in the arts world.

A strong essay on opera benefits from a focused thesis — whether analyzing a single aria, comparing productions, or evaluating a composer's legacy — rather than attempting to survey the entire art form. Evidence drawn from the score, libretto, performance history, or critical reception tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating plot summary as analysis; the goal is always to interpret what musical and dramatic choices mean, not simply describe what happens on stage.

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Paper Masters
Exoticism in nineteenth and early twentieth century opera
Exoticism in 19th and 20th Century Opera Exoticism was a cultural invention of the 17th Century, enjoying resurgence in the 19th and 20th Centuries due to increased travel and trade by Europeans in foreign, intriguing continents. The "West," eventually including the United States, adapted and recreated elements of those alluring cultures according to Western bias, creating escapist art forms that blended fantasy with reality. Two examples of Exoticism in Opera are Georges Bizet's "Carmen," portraying cultural bias toward gypsies and Basques, and Giacomo Puccini's "Madama Butterfly," portraying cultural bias toward the Far East. Butterfly's "exotic geisha" imagery of the Far East and Carmen's "earthy Spanish gypsy" imagery originating from the Middle East blossomed from escapist original source material that was borrowed and embellished to create some of the finest operas of the modern art world. Though the premieres of both operas were poorly received, both "Carmen" and "Madama Butterfly" survived to become classic, enduring masterpieces.
Paper Undergraduate
Antitrust Practices and Market Power
Antitrust case: 2001 antitrust Microsoft settlement
Essay Doctorate
Visitor Attraction Management (LO 1) Legoland, Denmark
(LO 1) Legoland, Denmark and the Sydney Opera House
Research Paper Doctorate
Analysis of persuasive writing techniques and strategies
¶ … Persuasion is writing technique to persuade a reader to ones own point-of-view. This involves not only hard work but also involves the human psyche, which has to be satisfied. Persuasion is not merely ones opinion…
Thesis Doctorate
Musical Theatre From Musical to Film it
It is rare to find a quality musical that is beautifully adapted from the stage onto the screen. In fact, throughout the years, American cinema has ping-ponged between deaths and revivals where musical film adaptations…
Thesis Undergraduate
Le Grand Hautbois and Baroque Wind Music at Louis XIV's Court
During the reign of Louis XIII and especially Louis XIV, the courts were alive with new Baroque music and instruments. Many new wind instruments were being created with a variety of innovations and some other…
Research Paper Doctorate
Greek drama and its historical significance
Greek Drama and Its Effects on Drama Today
Research Paper Doctorate
Age and Several Thousand Miles Separated Russian
¶ … age and several thousand miles separated Russian Alexander Pushkin and American Flannery O'Connor. This essay seeks to illustrate why they deserve to be considered as icons of world literature.
Research Paper Doctorate
Negro Spirituals and the Development of Blues Ragtime and Jazz Music
The melodies and rhythms of Africa have found their way to America through many ways and the African-American spirituals are one of them. There is one religious folk song, originally sung by the African-American…
Essay Undergraduate
Management, in Particular the Management of Mega
This paper delves into the theory behind event management, and it dips deeply into several aspects of mega events like the 2012 London Olympic Games and the 2006 World Cup in Germany. While there were snags in London, and costs that rose above what had been planned, the Games were a huge success. In Germany, those games were also very successful, and the reasons why are contained in this paper.