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Symbolism
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Symbolism is a literary device in which objects, characters, settings, or events carry meaning beyond their literal presence in a text. It is a central subject in literature courses at every level, from introductory composition to advanced literary criticism, because it asks students to move past surface reading and engage with how writers construct layers of meaning. Works ranging from August Wilson's Fences and James Baldwin's Sonny's Blues to Flannery O'Connor's Good Country People, John Steinbeck's The Chrysanthemums, and James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man all reward close symbolic analysis, making symbolism a topic that cuts across poetry, drama, and fiction alike.

Student papers on this topic approach symbolism from several directions. Many focus on a single work—Shirley Jackson's The Lottery, Tennessee Williams's The Glass Menagerie, or Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni's Clothes—and trace how specific symbols develop across a narrative to reinforce themes of death, family, identity, or transformation. Others place symbolic systems in broader cultural or religious contexts, drawing on frameworks such as Kabbalistic tradition or the Hebrew Bible to illuminate how inherited symbol systems shape literary meaning. Some papers take a comparative angle, examining how imagery and symbolism work together across poems like W. B. Yeats's The Gyres or Yusef Komunyakaa's Facing It.

A strong essay on symbolism begins with a focused, arguable thesis that connects a specific symbol to a larger thematic claim rather than simply cataloguing what symbols appear. Evidence drawn from close reading—precise quotations and attention to context—carries the most weight, since meaning depends on how and when a symbol appears. The most common pitfall is treating symbolism as fixed and universal; effective analysis instead shows how meaning is built through the particular choices a writer makes within a specific work.

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Masque of the Red Death
Edgar Allan Poe's the Masque of the Red Death is a short story written in 1842 that tells the tale of a wealthy nobleman, Prospero, who seals himself up inside his castellated abbey in order to avoid a great plague…
Paper Undergraduate
Chocolat Directed by Lasse Hallsstrom.
Chocolat Directed by Lasse Hallsstrom. Starring Johnny Depp. 2000.
Paper Undergraduate
Advertisement concepts and applications
The advertising I have selected for description is an advertisement to Goodyear, renowned worldwide producers of tires. The reason I have selected this advertisement is that, despite a limited textual message, the means…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Oedipus Tyrannus Sophocles\' Play Considers
Sophocles' play considers the life of Oedipus, and the interplay of fate and free will. One of the questions often asked about the play is whether Oedipus could have used free will to stop the fulfillment of the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Book of Revelation: Looking Beyond
Book of Revelation: Looking Beyond Revelation is could easily be considered the most controversial book in the New Testament; if not the entire Bible itself. Many have tried in vain to understand what the book is trying…
Paper Doctorate
Macario and Godfather Death Fairy
Fairy tales offer rich imagery, symbolism, and archetypes on which longer, more complex works can be based. Roberto Galvadon's 1960 film Macario is one of those works, an enchanting black-and-white Mexican production…
Essay Doctorate
New York Art New York\'s Post WWII
After World War II, so many parts of Europe were in ruin. Economies were shattered, new governments worked to gain mandates for their authority and the people of Europe's countless and once rich cultural centers…
Thesis Doctorate
Symbolism in literature and visual art
This paper examines the four different critical analyses of Flannery O'Connor's "Everything That Rises Must Converge." It looks at how each critic views symbolism in the story and shows why a superficial reading of the tale stops at race and why a deeper and more thorough investigation leads one to a battle between pride and humility.
Paper Undergraduate
Death: concepts, cultural perspectives, and philosophical dimensions
Questions surrounding death and the nature of human existence have intrigued the human race for millennia. The discovery of burial sites dating back from 70,000 to 15,000 B.C.E. carefully laid with certain belongings,…
Paper Doctorate
Hills Like White Elephants -- Critical Literary
Introduction One of the first things entering the mind of a reader (on an obvious level) in Hemingway's short story is that the image of a white elephant the woman sees in the line of hills in the distance has created a classic man-woman conundrum. She sees it her way and he sees it his. The beer and the anis del Toro – and the expectant train – are just pieces on the chessboard, merely part of the setting that perhaps will play a role in this very short story. Thesis: Like his other short stories, this brilliant piece of fiction by Hemingway is very tightly written but it packs symbolism, irony and characterization into a short amount of space. In this story, the ultimate meaning is that the man does not wish to take responsibility for the woman's pregnancy and on the other hand she has superior imagination, vision, understanding, and knowledge of the natural world and of humanity. The white elephant to her is a rare and beautiful thing but to him the white elephant is something of less value he would rather avoid.