The Paper Experts has a detailed and extensive
subject list that categorizes our library of almost 20,000 essays
and term papers we have written since 1999. Feel free to find your
essay by selecting the subject that best fits the parameters of
your essay.
This paper examines the role the media plays in shaping the
perceptions of the American public in relation to the Seattle
protests of globalism and the World Trade Organization. The
paper examines the proposed goals and aims of globalism and
counters that with the concerns and rhetoric of the protestors.
Finally the media representation of the protests will be examined
in order to shed light on the manner in which our perceptions
of the protests have been influenced.
This paper is a short discussion of the life of Linda Brent,
as written by Harriet Jacobs in Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl. The paper examines the extent and meaning of slavery in
Linda's life outside the context of physical hardships and punishments,
considering slavery in a more ideological sense. The paper also
illustrates ways in which Linda took back some of the control
that was placed on her, if only briefly.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 0
source(s) listed
Filename: 20698
Price: US$14.85
80.
20730 Robert
E. Lee: An Analysis of Strengths and Weaknesses
This twelve-page undergraduate paper examines the strengths
and weaknesses of Robert E. Lee as a military commander. The
author notes that during the early years of the American Civil
War, Lee’s brilliant leadership skills and battlefield mastery
of military tactics and strategy enabled him to defeat superior
Union forces in critical battles such as Fredericksburg and
Chancellorsville, where his boldness, willingness to divide
his forces in the face of the enemy, and keen insight into the
weaknesses of Union commanders were critical factors.
Pages: 12
Bibliography: 7
source(s) listed
Filename: 20730
Price: US$59.40
81.
20781 Manifest
Destiny in North America
This paper briefly examines the ideological differences between
the spirit that characterized expansion in the original North
American colonies, and what was to come in the 1800s in the
form of Manifest Destiny. The argument is based on the assumption
that with the national identity created by the Revolutionary
War, it would have been impossible for the colonies to formulate
anything as ideologically articulate as Manifest Destiny.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 1
source(s) listed
Filename: 20781
Price: US$14.85
82.
20974 The Culture
That Brought Indentured Servitude to the Americas and Its Effect
on the Native American Population
This essay critically examines the impact that European colonizers
had on the native cultures that already existed in the Americas
when Europeans began to arrive in the wake of Columbus's discovery
of the New World. It examines the culture of domination of the
Europeans through the practice of indentured servitude. Then
the essay uses two first-hand accounts and responses to the
colonization to create an historical context for the domination
the Europeans practiced.
Pages: 6
Bibliography: 1
source(s) listed
Filename: 20974
Price: US$29.70
83.
21105 Persistence
of Identity Among the Alabama-Coushatta
Our readings in this class have helped us to see American Indians
as members of living cultures, neither as artifacts representing
some romanticized and fictitious archetypal past nor as the
walking wounded of centuries of racist policy by the United
States government and its non-Indian citizens. This paper examines
the ways in which those American Indians alive today must be
seen as both different from other Americans and the same, just
as Jewish Americans and African-Americans and just-off-the-boat
Russian-Americans are different and the same. Because the historical
background of each of these groups is different and because
each group has been treated different by the rest of the country,
each ethnic and racial group in the United States has chosen
different strategies to maintain, or to let go of, its cultural
identity.
Pages: 7
Bibliography: 7
source(s) listed
Filename: 21105
Price: US$34.65
84.
21190 The Sedition
Act of 1918 and the Smith Act of 1940: The Real Meaning of Clear
and Present Danger
This paper is an analysis of the Sedition Act of 1918 and the
Smith Act of 1940. The paper discusses and compares the details
and particulars of each act and demonstrates the function of
each act through an example court case. Ultimately, the paper
argues that both acts were employed by the United States government
to limit free speech in the interest of cementing its own power
and authority.