Nonfiction and Rhetoric from

Singapore American School 

Image Credit Here

Vol. 2, No. 1 | November 2024

Virtue & Vice

In our first issue, we explore right and wrong and all that’s in between. We seek to answer life’s ethical questions: what are the boundaries between good and bad, hero and anti-hero, pure and tainted?

Drawing by Yuku Kusanagi

Featured Essays

Personal Essay

Devin Bush Children Caught in the Crossfire: Protecting Muslim Youth in the Struggle for Religious Freedom Across Rural America

Radhika Mittal Reflected

Brianna O'Connor The Necessity of Murder

Review 

Gabriella Yeung Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story: Delving into the Mind of an Anti-Hero

Stefania Sigismondi The Substance: A Vomit-Inducing Pleasure

Adam Brest Ambition Corrupted: My Take on The Wolf of Wall Street

Opinion

Minji Suk Anna Delvey: The Evil Yet Heroic Mastermind

Kaitlyn Zhu No Eyes Anywhere: The Vice of Virtue Signaling

Henry Moon Chokes, Clutches, Vices, and Virtues

Aryan Pershad Tempted by Intelligence

Sabrina Peña-Sy Losing My Religion: A Guide to Fighting the Catholic Church Abuse Scandals

Billy Park The Right Choice? The Gender Divide Steering Gen-Z Men Away From the Left

Gayatri Dhir Hysteria, Harris, and Me: Notes on Female Volume

Reese Min Beyond Saints and Sinners: Challenging the Moral Binary

Kian Williams The Parsi Paradox: A Closed Door to an Ancient Faith

Akshay Agarwal Mischief: Pranks May not be all Jokes

Daniel Xu Humility: The Newest Vice?

Cultural Criticism

Raynard Oei The Anatomy of Corporal Punishment

Sammie Xie A-sian not B-sian: Meritocracy in East Asian Education System

Kaavya Anuj Ambition Doesn’t Look Good on Her

Eclectic

Emma Torjesen Lords, Ladies & Lurking Little Vices

Sylvia Barrios Gotor Dressing Up in Gray: How Children are Taught to Worship Villains

Laura Chen Call of Duty: The Dilemma of Filial Piety

Kirin Chadha Self-Worth in the Age of Validation

Isabel Pineda Are Superheroes Super-Childish?

Daniel Tong Is Morality as Bleak as it Seems?

Disclaimer

The opinions expressed in The Spark are the views of individual student creators and are not representative of Singapore American School or its employees.