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Vertigo
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Vertigo, as a literary and cultural topic, occupies a space where physical sensation meets philosophical and psychological meaning. In literature and film studies courses, it functions as both a literal condition and a powerful metaphor for disorientation, loss of control, and the instability of perception and identity. The concept invites students to examine how a sense of imbalance — whether bodily or existential — shapes a character's understanding of life, the self, and the world. Its academic interest lies in how the experience of vertigo can represent broader questions about persona, reality, and the human condition, themes that appear across fiction, film, and cultural criticism.

Student essays on this topic approach vertigo from several distinct angles. A strong thread of film analysis runs through the papers, particularly examinations of Alfred Hitchcock's work and the career of James Stewart, as well as broader explorations of film history and genre, including horror. Other essays take a more philosophical direction, drawing on ideas about existential unease comparable to the themes found in Jean-Paul Sartre's Nausea, where disorientation and a fractured sense of self are central concerns. Some papers bring in a sociological or cultural lens, using vertigo as a conceptual frame to explore ideas about identity and perception in contemporary life.

A strong essay on this topic needs a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one interpretation of vertigo — metaphorical, cinematic, or philosophical — rather than treating all meanings at once. Evidence drawn from close textual or film analysis carries the most weight, particularly when it connects specific moments to the broader idea being argued. The most common pitfall is using vertigo loosely as a vague mood rather than defining precisely what the condition reveals about a character, persona, or cultural moment.

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Paper Masters
Book Jean-Paul Sartre Nausea
"Things are bad! Things are very bad: I have it, the filth, the Nausea." Bang! At this point I wanted to tell Antoine Roquentin that he is not alone in his misery. That I too have been afflicted with "the Nausea."
Paper Undergraduate
Analysis concepts and applications
An analysis of Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo. Narrative elements are analyzed to argue that the film is at its core a film noir movie. Also explores the dualities that emerged in the film, specifically how things are perceived and what deceptions arise due to the psychological trauma that Scottie is experiencing.
Research Paper Doctorate
Formalism in philosophy and art theory
The subject of films is a matter of dreams for many persons though the attraction has come down after the new medium of video has come in. Yet, for some it is still the medium to dream in.
Paper Doctorate
Installing Handrails at Victoria BC Ogden Point
This article provides background information regarding the construction of the Ogden Point Breakwater in Victoria, British Columbia. The analysis of the history of the breakwater is followed by a description of the proposal to install handrails on the breakwater in order to enhance safety. In addition to highlight the varying opinions regarding the proposal, the final section provides reasons against the installation of the handrails.
Paper Undergraduate
Mythology Cinema and Myth: Taxi
This paper explores how Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver (1976) evinces the Campbellian mythical form. The protagonist's often extreme violence is justified as the only recourse in saving a child prostitute from a life of crime; particular attention is directed toward how the protagonist undergoes the stages of the Campbellian journey.
Paper Undergraduate
Recommendations for improvement in organizational processes
One out of every three adults ages 65 and older experiences a fall annually however, only about 50% of health care providers discuss falls with these individuals. Falls are the leading cause of injury death in adults 65 years of age and older. More than 19,700 adults died in 2008 form accidental fall injuries and in 2009 out of the 2.2 million nonfatal fall injuries in older adults in excess of 581,000 individuals had to be hospitalized. The direct medical costs were over $19 billion in 2000. (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2012) According to the National Council of Certified Dementia Practitioners, "One of the most challenging, life-threatening issues related to care of the person with cognitive loss is the occurrence of wandering, wherein the person strays into unsafe territories and may be harmed." (2012) It is reported the long-term care facility is required to maintain a system that ensures that all equipment including "alarms, tracking devices and monitors are periodically checked and maintained for adequate functioning." (NCCDP, 2012) This work examines fall prevention in older adults in long-term facility care.
Research Paper Doctorate
Amusement Parks in the American 1890\'s
In the years just before the dawn of the 20th Century, America was going through dramatic cultural, social, political and economic changes. The Industrial Revolution was reshaping the way Americans worked and played; an…
Paper Doctorate
Cocaine the Long-Term and Short-Term
The cocaine story that is presented in this paper covers the health problems that result from use of the drug and also covers the difficulty that a frequent user has when attempting to stop using it. Sigmund Freud got heavily involved in cocaine use during his period psychotherapy experimentation but his jubilation at the possibility of the drug being applied to a number of health problems turned out to be strictly based on the euphoria he felt while using it. Cocaine can cause serious health problems and it is very addictive, so there are numerous reasons not to experiment with it at all.
Essay Doctorate
Martin Luther\'s Life and Legacy
Martin Luther was the founder of the Lutheran religion that many people still follow today. He attacked the Catholic Church and many of its practices as being theologically unsound and corrupt. Because of this, he was persecuted and his life endangered. Still, Luther believed very strongly in what he had to say about the Church. This paper addresses his life and the mark he made on religion.
Paper Doctorate
Alfred Hitchcock and Edgar Allan Poe
This paper discusses and compares the work of Alfred Hitchcock with the work of Edgar Allen Poe and how Poe has influenced what some may say the greatest director/film maker of all time. It discusses how Poe and Hitchcock share similar fears and obsessions and how the effectively translated them to famous work.