2003 - Present

Well, the past few years have come and gone, from economics of gender to law in Imperial China, I've taken a nice range of classes, here are the products of my academic experience:

Danton & The French Revolution | Abraham Lincoln & Uncle Toms Cabin
Caesar's Conquest of Gaul | 350 Lines about 700 Years of Greek Warfare
Women's Entry into Self-Employment | Gender & Society in Soviet Russia

Mao Zedong & Chiang Kai'Shek - A Comparison | Informal Mediation, An Overview & Analysis of Chinese Justice

2000-2002

I don't know why I created this section, I guess I just got bored of seeing old papers lying around, and I needed to bull shit some content.

But anyway, I'll start off with a bunch of papers I wrote my junior summer for a writing SAT 2 class my parents made me take. My personal favorite is the essay about lying, but some of this shit is really.. uh... shit. Seriously, I'm not to the point where I loathe what I was once but I definitely know my writing wouldn't have been so..... angered.

Anyway, here are the writings:

Lying & Success | Generation Conflict & Growth
The American Dream | The Best Things In Life Are "Free" | Art
Ignorance of the Law


Maybe with a little more age and sensibility (?), I've written the following papers the first semester of college. I believe that one or two of these papers are fairly well done but due to time/length constraints, I was unable to write in the detail and with the support I might have intended. Fairly noticeable in my current favorite paper which examines Marx's predictions on capitalist society, I do not have the room to really go into topics that could have taken up 5 to 10 pages (Catholicism as a monopoly, American values, economic problems, etc). It would probably be more appropriate to divide the topic into several different categories in chronological order, but I have yet to really delve beneath the surface of proceeding topics.

Nonetheless, college essays:

Marxian Analysis of Modern Society | Comparative Principles of Plato & Huxley
Mills and Dostoevsky | Underground Man in Brave New World

Mao Zedong & China | Marx's Influence | Automobiles & Streetcars

To understand these writings, read:

Plato, The Republic
Aldous Huxley, Brave New World
John Stuart Mill, On Liberty and Utilitarianism
Karl Marx, Communist Manifesto
Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes from Underground
Shaun Breslin, Mao


Well, second semester rolled around and here are the essays that represent my achievements/failings: