Student Scholarship & Creative Expression; Franklin College
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Created by: B.F. Hamilton Library
Last Updated: 2024-04-17
Collection Details
This collection encompasses student scholarship and creative expression in an open-access environment. Work was completed under the mentorship of Franklin College faculty at the undergraduate and graduate levels. Work within this collection includes research papers, images, presentations, and more. The collection dates back to 2015.
Feminine sexuality and the power that can be derived from it will be explored by analyzing the novel La Nina de Sus Ojos by Antonio Diaz Villamil. The Bolivian novel portrays the life and struggles of an indigenous identity...
La nina de sus ojos, written by the Bolivian Antonia Diaz Villamill, tells the story of Domy Perales, a mestizo girl who can attend an elite boarding school through the hard work and sacrifices of her indigenous parents. During...
Washington D.C. struggled for much of the 19th century to be a capital suitable for the country. While one definitive factor cannot be pointed to a collection of political greed, poor land quality, slavery, the War of 1812 and...
Compared to the Western perception of the "State," which has remained more or less constant since 1648, the Muslim understanding of the concept has varied, although the original philosophy of the Dar al-Islam has always been at...
While holistic planned grazing has been shown to work in reestablishing plant life, FMNR is a far more simplistic approach that needs less timing and resources to be effective. Through this comparative study, FMNR is shown to...
A history of video games since the 1950s and how humans have played a part in the development process of video games. Culture is also an impact on games.
This paper is an analysis of how John Dillinger affected the media and how the media helped create the celebrity of John Dillinger. This paper correlates the events of Dillinger's criminal career and how the media portrayed...
The paper looks at the work La nina de sus ojos and the idea of mimicry. Throughout the book the protagonist, Damy Perales, acts as a mimic man for the Bolivian government to gain control of the indigenous people of the country.