Great Awakenings Inamerican History55 Complete 1

Great Awakenings Inamerican History55 Complete 1

A prospectus is one paragraph which identifies your topic, the thesis statement, and why you chose this
particular topic. The bibliography is a list of 10 sources you plan to use once you begin to write y our
paper. You can only have one website. All other sources must be books, journals, newspapers, movies,
magazines, etc. The bibliography must be done by MLA format.
Information regarding MLA format will be included in this folder. Please adhere to the rules regarding
the format as it relates to MLA format.

Topics-These are general topics. Your job is to choose a topic and narrow the topic to a thesis statement
which should include two to three supporting details which becomes your research.

1. Perspective Pathways to Greater Human Flourishing
2. Artists in Times of War
3. Contemporary Music and Political Commentary
4. The Application of Socrates to 21st Century Western Democracy
5. Appalachian Language and Regional Identity
6. The Harlem Renaissance in the African American Experience
7. The Humanities and Definitions of Freedom
8. The Age of Enlightenment
9. The Reformation in Art
10. American Distress and Contemporary Art
11. Theology and Medicine
12. Social Darwinism

13. Historical Tension Between Science and Religion
14. Human Subcultures
15. Gender and the Education Experience
16. Color and the Education Experience
17. The Industrial Revolution and Human Identity
18. Photography in Shaping Public Opinion
19. Social Media and Modern Human Interactions
20. The Printing Press and Dissemination of Ideas
21. Racism and the Human Family Unit
22. Human Beings and Violence
23. Human and Animal Sacrifice in Religion
24. The Odyssey and Gender Expectations
25. Non-governmental organizations (NGO) in international law
26. Regulatory process and public input
27. Religious Freedom Restoration Act
28. Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act
29. Roberts Court
30. Sales tax on internet purchases
31. Second Amendment
32. Social media and freedom of speech
33. Sovereign citizen movement
34. Supreme Court, power of
35. Language revitalization
36. Oral history
37. Regional languages
38. Slang
39. Southern dialect
40. Whistled languages
41. Afrofuturism

42. Arthurian legend
43. Beat poets
44. Broadside Press
45. Concrete poetry
46. Economic context of a novel
47. Ecocriticism
48. Ecopoetry
49. merican civil religion
50. Buddhism in contemporary
India
51. Christians in contemporary
Middle East
52. Conscientious objection in
wartime
53. Evangelicals and Catholics
Together project
54. Great Awakenings in
American history
55. Hasidic movements
56. Hinduism in the West
57. House churches in China

58. Nation of Islam
59. New Atheism
60. New religious
movements
61. Pentecostalism in Latin
America