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World History
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World history is one of the broadest fields of academic study, appearing in secondary and post-secondary courses across history, social studies, and humanities programs. It asks students to move beyond national or regional narratives and examine how civilizations, governments, and peoples have shaped and been shaped by one another across long periods of time. The field is academically compelling precisely because it demands perspective-taking at scale — understanding how political structures, religious movements, colonial encounters, and economic forces develop and interact across continents and centuries.

The papers archived under this topic reflect that range. Some take a regional case-study approach, examining British colonisation in Australia or US and Latin American imperialism. Others focus on specific periods, such as Early Modern Europe or the 18th and 19th centuries. Still others analyze particular events or governments, like the Weimar Republic, or explore the roles of rulers such as Cyrus and Darius of Persia. Thematic angles also appear, including responses to economic strain, the role of child soldiers in conflicts in Burundi and Sudan, and the relationship between Eastern North American peoples and American democracy.

A strong world history essay begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of events. Evidence drawn from specific political decisions, government policies, or documented historical developments carries more weight than general claims about human progress or decline. Writers should ground comparisons in concrete examples and define the time period under examination early in the essay. The most common pitfall is attempting to cover too much ground — narrowing the scope to a specific period, region, or theme consistently produces sharper, more persuasive analysis.

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Paper Undergraduate
Constant Traits of Human Nature
Julius Caesar is considered to have been a military genius and an efficient public administrator in Ancient Rome. However, his imperial hubris caused him to become a permanent dictator which ultimately resulted in his…
Research Paper Doctorate
Equiano's Slave Narrative as a Spiritual Conversion Story
¶ … classic slave narrative, "The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African" by Olaudah Equiano. Specifically it will answer the questions: "In what way is Equiano writing a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Specification requirements and guidelines
Laertes, Ophelia, 'Modernity' and the "Self"-Evident within Shakespeare's Hamlet
Research Paper Undergraduate
United States in the Aftermath
¶ … United States in the aftermath of World War II experienced a growth unprecedented in world history. The rise of a strong middle class and virtual elimination of poverty showed the successes of industrialization in…
Essay Doctorate
Process industrialization and its effects on American transportation development
Feudalism was the primary economic base during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. This was more of a patron system in which the means of production (land, any equipment, etc.) was owned by the Church or royalty.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Elie Wiesel and Holocaust literature
Elie Wiesel is a renowned American-Jewish novelist and political activist. He is best known for being a Holocaust survivor, the subject of the majority of his over forty books. His best known work, Night, is a memoir of…
Paper Undergraduate
Political Violence in Latin America After World War II
During the second half of the twentieth century, the Latin American countries were shaken by numerous violent acts in their political life. There were revolutions, coups d'etat, civil war, terrorism and other forms of…
Paper Doctorate
Genocide Is a Traumatic Part
Genocide is a traumatic part of world history. The term genocide was coined in the aftermath of World War II. When the world learned that more than six million Jewish people had been murdered by the German military…
Paper Undergraduate
Economic Strain: 1400-1500 and 1550-1700
One of the most common responses to economic difficulties during the period of world history from 1400 to 1550 was that of exploration. By finding new routes to the Indies, rulers hoped to find new goods and also new…
Essay Doctorate
External vs. The Internal View in Neo-Confucian
This paper is a look at two Neo-Confucian thinkers and teachers who lived about 250 years apart from each other. The first, Zhu Xi, believed in an external perfection of the individual throught he mediation oof society. Wang Yangming believed that the individual had a perfect true nature and that they needed to tap into that to achieve a true moral sense.