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Recent Posts
- Love = Need for Connection + Need for Survival + Bullshit
- Presidency
- Pulling the wings off M. Butterfly: Dramatic Irony, Performance and the Third Space in Hwang’s dramatic script and film adaptation
- Failing to Cope
- The Two Oroonokos
- Inventing Identities: Becoming a Mestiza in Julia Alvarez’s How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents and Esmeralda Santiago’s When I Was Puerto Rican
- An Investigation of Langston Hughes’ “Third Degree”
- Irony and Immortality: An Explication of A. E. Stallings’ “Arachne Gives Thanks to Athena”
- The Duty of Man in Austen’s Mansfield Park and Emma
- Critique of Last Child in the Woods
Categories
Category Archives: Graduate Level Papers
The Impact of Natural Resource Dependence on Human Right Practices in the Former Soviet Republics
By Samantha Lange Abstract This study explores the relationship between dependence on hydrocarbon export revenues and human rights practices in the context of the fifteen former Soviet republics.[1] Here I seek to expand upon the literature surrounding the “resource curse”— … Continue reading
Posted in Edition: Fall 2010, Environment, Graduate Level Papers, Nature Writing, Politics
Tagged Human Rights, literature, Political Science, Soviet Republics, Stetson
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Fall 2010
These essays, research papers, and response papers are examples of the depth and breadth of academic work by Stetson University students. This inaugural edition of Inkwell features papers written for English, Political Science, and Environmental Science classes. Students in all … Continue reading
Posted in 100 Level Papers, 200 Level Papers, 300 Level Papers, 400 Level Papers, Arts/Culture, Environment, Ethnic, Gender, Graduate Level Papers, Nature Writing, Politics, Science, Uncategorized
Tagged A.E. Stalling, comic book, critique, Emma, Emma Woodhouse, Esmeralda Santiago, Garcia Girls, gender, Hontoon Island, Hwang, Jane Austen, Jane Goodall, Julia Alvarez, Langston Hughes, Last Child in the Woods, Mansfield Park, Marvel, Oroonoko, Presidency, Soviet, species, To the Lighthouse, Virginia Woolf
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