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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 Doctorate
Butterfly David Henry Hwang\'s Pulitzer-Prize-Winning Drama M.
This paper analyzes David Henry Hwang's Pulitzer-Prize-winning drama "M. Butterfly" in terms of how it constructs a drama out of cultural preconceptions. The paper uses the argument made by Edward Said in "Orientalism" to understand the cultural differences in "M. Butterfly" as being imagined largely in terms of gender differences. The way in which "M. Butterfly" constructs itself in terms of gender-reversal is shown to be part of the way whereby a Chinese-American author appeals to a largely white American audience.
Paper Doctorate
Exotism in 19th and Early 20th Century Opera
This paper will use three examples of 19th and 20th century opera to examine and interpret the term "exoticism." The paper will take time to clarify the relativity of the term exoticism and how it manifests in these three works. What is exoticism and how does it work? What is the function of exoticism in culture, in art, and in general? What does it reflect about a culture and what desires does exoticism express? The paper will attempt to ask and answer more questions utilizing Madame Butterfly, Carmen, and Aida as examples of the exotic at work in art.
Paper Undergraduate
Dance? How Did the Space Impact Your
I have barley seen professional dance in a real life setting. I have mostly seen dance on movies and then the first impression of dance comes as that of ballroom dancing, specifically traditional waltzes done according,…
Paper Undergraduate
Nabokov's Speak, Memory and Simic's Poetry: A Close Reading
Chapter Seven of Speak, Memory is about the family train trip from Russia to Biarritz, via Paris. He describes the upper class train car, its elegant upholstery and walls, also and describes what he sees going by…
Paper Doctorate
Are There Too Many Musicals in the West End?
Michael BIllington believes that the theatre boom in the West End contributes to the degradation of the quality of theatre in London. I agree with Billington's position. The ticket prices in the West End coupled with the excessive amount of repetitive productions is not good for the theatre tradition or for the consuming public. Furthermore, I believe that the audiences have the power to effect creative change in the West End.
Research Paper Doctorate
Walt Whitman: major works and literary influence
Walt Whitman, an American poet was born on May 31, 1819 and a son of Long Island and the second son of Walter Whitman, a house builder, and Louisa Van Velsor. It was at the age of twelve Whitman began to learn the…
Paper Doctorate
Compare and Contrast an Opera
This paper compares two arias. Both are from operas written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. In the first, the Countess is despondent because her husband the Count wishes to seduce a young woman named Susanna. In the other, Donna Elvira vows revenge against Don Giovanni for seducing her and then abandoning her. Both women deal with the sexual needs of a man and are left despairing over them.
Paper Undergraduate
Unit 3 topic overview and key concepts
This paper is a discussion of Willa Cather's Paul's Case. It examines the meanings of "theater" and "Romance" in Cather's characterization of Paul. Explaining the why Cather capitalize the word Romance. The paper explains the relationship between theater and Romance for Paul as well as investigating the effect of Cather's emphasis "Perhaps it was because, in Paul's world, the natural nearly always wore the guise of ugliness, that a certain element of artificiality, seemed to him necessary in beauty"
Research Paper Doctorate
Art History - Survival Research Labs Survival
Survival Research Laboratories (SRL) is the brainchild of Mark Pauline, and was founded in 1978. SRL has the following Mission Statement "SRL is an organization of creative technicians dedicated to redirecting the…
Paper Undergraduate
Sentiment There Are as Many Sentiment Analysis
There are as many sentiment analysis techniques as there are reasons for conducting sentiment analysis. Analysis techniques are employed to discern sentence, phrase, word and text meanings, and predictive,…