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Science Fiction
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Science fiction is a genre that uses speculative premises — advanced technology, alien worlds, dystopian societies, and post-human futures — to examine fundamental questions about what it means to be human. It appears across literature, cultural studies, and media courses, and it attracts serious academic attention because it functions as social criticism dressed in imaginative clothing. Works like Ursula K. Le Guin's narratives, Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, William Gibson's Neuromancer, and Margaret Atwood's fiction give students rich primary texts in which technology, gender, identity, and power are not background details but the central argument of the work itself.

Student essays on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on character analysis, using figures from specific novels to explore themes of identity and humanity. Others are comparative, placing authors like Bellamy and Atwood side by side to trace how the genre has engaged with social reform across different eras. Narrative craft is another common angle, particularly how point of view shapes a reader's relationship to speculative worlds. Still others approach science fiction through genre theory, examining where the boundaries between fantasy and science fiction fall and why those distinctions matter critically.

A strong essay grounds its argument in close textual reading rather than broad generalizations about the genre. The most persuasive papers identify a specific tension — between nature and technology, or between individual ability and social control — and trace it carefully through the text. A common pitfall is treating science fiction as pure entertainment and neglecting how its speculative elements function as deliberate commentary on real human societies.

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Essay Undergraduate
Art Five Years From Now, You Chat
Five years from now, you chat with a friend about your favorite humanities class (this one, naturally). What were your favorite artworks encountered throughout the course that you will share with them? Why?
Research Paper Doctorate
George Orwell\'s 1984 Post-9/11 America
Post-9/11 America is an uncomfortably appropriate time to be taking a look at literature like George Orwell's 1984. Given the current political climate of the United States, Orwell's dark, repressive world hits close to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Music, art, and literature: interdisciplinary connections
From impressionism to pop art, jazz to hip hop, science fiction to beat poetry, artistic, musical, and literary expressions have varied considerably between 1870 and 2005. The period between the end of the nineteenth…
Paper High School
New African by Andrea Lee
Calculating the value of literature is much like calculating the value of a work of art—it's mostly personal taste with some somewhat objective criteria (golden ratios and such). So what makes a good book? Mostly, that's up to you. Did you enjoy reading it? Did it meet your objective in reading? Why you read has as much to do with the quality of the work as the work itself. However, in order to equitably evaluate literature, we need to look at why a writer writes, and not just why readers read. If Socrates is to be believed, only the examined life is worth living. Considering how enduring that thought has been, it probably has some merit, and we can apply that to why writers write—to examine life. A piece of prose or poetry that somehow makes us see—as writers and readers—the truth of who we are, good and bad. That's the literature worth reading.
Research Paper Doctorate
Notes and note-taking practices in academic contexts
¶ … biggest factor that a college student or a business executive should consider when shopping for a microcomputer is what that computer will be used for. For example, if the computer is going to be used primarily for…
Research Paper Doctorate
Plato's Mimesis and Victorian Gothic Literature
Art, as defined by Plato in his paradigmatic work The Republic, serves both as a definition qua definition - a way of telling us what art should be in and of itself - and as an exemplar of other aspects of society.
Research Paper Doctorate
Video games and interactivity
Information technology has changed the way we live in today's world. Everything from our television to our cell phones are connected through network medium. Computers define the way we do many of the things in our…
Paper Doctorate
Carbon dioxide snow falling on Mars
The research and mission reported by this article regards unique weather patterns occurring on Mars. According to data gathered by the Phoenix Mars lander and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter data, there are clouds of water vapor on Mars and there is the only known stance of carbon dioxide snow falling in this solar system. The research on this phenomenon was first published in the Journal of Geophysical Research. The CO2 snowfalls occur in the southern hemisphere, around the pole during the winters on Mars. The data shows that carbon dioxide stays frozen on the Martian surface year round on the south pole. Most of the data analysis is performed at the California Institute Technology of Pasadena.
Paper Doctorate
Film Analysis of the Film
Wall-E is a sci-Fi film that shows displays a story of lonely robot that has been left on Earth in order to clean up the mess humanity's has made. Disney-Pixar's, Wall-e, through analyzation is a film that is capable of…
Paper Doctorate
Women and masculinity in science fiction literature
Science fiction has always been a masculine genre, no matter that Mary Shelley invented it in her novel Frankenstein. Until fairly recent times, most science fiction writers were men, and they dealt with subjects like technology, power, space battles, featuring male heroes, explorers and adventurers. In film, science fiction has been a perfect subject for ultra-masculine actors like Arnold Schwarzenegger, although Lieutenant Ripley in the Alien trilogy proved that women could be masculine heroes as well and very effective at destroying hostile creatures that threaten humanity. Joe Haldeman's novel Forever Peace certainly fits within this conventional masculine narrative in science fiction, since the story is related by a male narrator named Sergeant Julian Class, an alienated soldier of the First World who opposes his own government and society. He is a class type of alienated and disillusioned male hero who nevertheless hopes that the world can achieve peace and prosperity through better use of technology. Even though it was written thirty years before, Ursula Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness is a radical departure from these types of themes and characters, since it takes place on an underdeveloped planet called Gethen far in the future.