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Revenge
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Revenge is a compelling subject in academic writing because it sits at the intersection of ethics, psychology, literature, and law. Students encounter it across disciplines — from literature and philosophy courses examining moral justice to criminal law classes analyzing punishment and retribution. What makes revenge intellectually rich is the tension it creates between emotional justification and ethical consequence, between a character's or society's desire for satisfaction and the cost of pursuing it. Works like The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, Shakespeare's Hamlet, Titus Andronicus, The Revenger's Tragedy, and the ancient Greek Oresteia all place revenge at the center of their moral universes, giving students a wide literary tradition to analyze.

The papers archived here approach revenge from several distinct angles. Literary analysis is the most common, with essays examining how specific characters — particularly sons avenging fathers — navigate moral ambiguity, madness, and consequence. Comparative approaches appear frequently, setting texts like Hamlet against The Revenger's Tragedy, or contrasting adaptations of The Count of Monte Cristo. Some essays take an ethical or philosophical angle, asking whether a quest for revenge can ever be morally just. Others draw on religious frameworks or principles of criminal law to evaluate revenge against broader systems of justice.

A strong essay on revenge requires a focused, arguable thesis — not simply that revenge appears in a text, but what the work ultimately claims about its moral or psychological consequences. Literary evidence drawn from character actions, motivation, and outcome tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating revenge as self-evidently wrong or justified without engaging the genuine complexity the source material presents.

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Paper Undergraduate
Eugene O\'Neill\'s Mythic Re-Enactments
This paper examines Eugene O'Neill's use of the mythic structure of Aeschylus' Oresteia in his trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra. The play suggests that O'Neill's play is built around acts of repetition and re-enactment: not only does O'Neill himself re-enact the Oresteia, but his characters seem to ritually re-enact the behavior of those who have gone before. The play connects Mannon's death in the play to a ritualized re-enactment of the death of Abraham Lincoln.
Paper Doctorate
The anti-hero narrator in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground
The books that emerged during the first half of the 19th century and some a little later as well belonged to the romantic age of literature that demonstrated a deep fascination for the dark side of human nature.
Paper Undergraduate
Story Diagram and Narrative Analysis: On the Waterfront
Framing crime drama: the police know that dockworker's union boss Johnny Friendly is involved with organized crime but cannot get any useful witness to snitch on him
Paper Undergraduate
MA in HRM He Was a Practitioner
He was a practitioner of medicine, skilled in the arts of weaponry of virtually any variety. He spoke at least five different languages, and was familiar with customs and practices throughout Europe and the Mediterranean.
Paper Doctorate
Moral Reasoning Taps Is a Movie About
Taps is a movie about a private military high school, where the school is facing closure. To prevent this the adolescents attending the campus take over the school; in terms of adolescent moral reasoning, the boys…
Research Paper Doctorate
British politics: history, systems, and contemporary issues
Since the invention of cinema in the twentieth century one of the favorite subjects of the moviemakers has been to spread out historic myths and events. The movie Elizabeth released on 13th November 1998 is directed by…
Thesis High School
Sun Tzu the Art of War
In his famous book The Art of War, Sun-zi (Sun Tzu) was evidently influenced by Confucian ideals, such as his statements about the avoiding prolonged war if possible and the most successful generals being those who…
Research Paper Doctorate
Scott Fitzgerald Hollywood Years the Turning Point
The turning point in F. Scott Fitzgerald's life was when he met in 1918 Zelda Sayre, herself an aspiring writer, they married in 1920. In the same year appeared Fitzgerald's first novel, "This side of paradise," in…
Essay Undergraduate
Movie Analysis Dead Man\'s Walk
In the stories of the Wild West, there is always a white man in a white hat who serves as the hero of the story. The villain is always the other white man in the black hat. Symbolically, the villain becomes a racial…
Paper Doctorate
Aeschylus: life, works, and dramatic legacy
Ancient legends are known throughout the world and retold in versions generation after generation. Authors take an old story and reimagine it and reinvent it to fit the perspective of their own generation.