Essay Topic Hub

1950s
Essays

1,836+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,836 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

The 1950s represent a pivotal decade in modern history, drawing sustained attention across disciplines including American history, cultural studies, sociology, and political science. The period sits at the intersection of postwar optimism, Cold War anxiety, and deep social contradiction, making it a rich subject for academic inquiry. Its tensions — between conformity and rebellion, prosperity and inequality, tradition and change — give students a framework for examining how societies construct identity, distribute power, and imagine the future. Works like Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone and texts engaging social institutions provide theoretical grounding for understanding how community life in this era shaped patterns that persist today.

The papers archived on this topic approach the 1950s from a wide range of angles. Some examine gender discrimination in the workforce, analyzing how postwar ideologies confined and constrained social roles. Others use cultural texts — such as the semiotics of American popular music or auteur filmmaking — to read the decade's values and anxieties through creative production. Literary analysis appears in engagements with works like Albert Memmi's The Pillar of Salt, while sociological and policy-oriented papers trace shifts in institutions like marriage, community, and the legal system through case studies and comparative frameworks.

A strong essay on the 1950s requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of the decade. Evidence drawn from primary sources, period texts, or well-grounded theoretical frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the era as uniformly prosperous or stable — effective essays acknowledge the decade's internal contradictions and connect historical patterns to present-day consequences.

1,836 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Literature concepts and applications
Graham Greene's novel The Power and the Glory (1940) is one of his works that the author himself identified as a Catholic story, and it is clearly concerned with issues of Catholicism in both theory and practice.
Research Paper Doctorate
Governing Race: Politics, Process and the Politics
¶ … Governing Race: Politics, Process and the Politics of Race by Nina M. Moore. Specifically, it will contain a detailed book report on the book. "Governing Race" is an important and viable book for any Black Studies…
Research Paper Doctorate
Music history and appreciation
¶ … Music appreciation [...] my personal attraction to jazz music and some of its composers and performers. Jazz music has been called a particularly American invention, and the many forms of jazz epitomize a successful…
Research Paper Doctorate
The Rise of Professionals: Class, Power, and Society
¶ … Growth of Industrialism and White-Collar Workers
Research Paper Doctorate
Movie a Beautiful Mind
Ron Howard's 2001 film A Beautiful Mind caused as much controversy over its treatment of mental illness as it did over its winning the Academy Award for best picture. Based on Sylvia Nassar's book of the same name, A…
Research Paper Doctorate
Rock N\' Roll: A Reflection of American
Music and art are products of the society from which they evolved. History tells us about events that happened in a certain time, but the events themselves do no tell the whole story.
Paper Undergraduate
Global health concepts and applications
Global Health / Nursing Trends Wealthy Nations
Research Paper Undergraduate
The Rastafarian movement: history, beliefs, and cultural significance
The Rastafarian Movement started as a religion in the 1930s in Jamaica and the spread of the Reggae music in the 1070s transformed it into a political manifest as well as a social movement among those who were…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Smog Is a Form of Air Pollution.
Smog is a form of air pollution. It is made up of a combination of smoke and fog. In the old days smog was mainly caused due to the burning of coal. The mixture of smoke and sulfur dioxide is what resulted in the…
Paper Doctorate
The terrorist group Hezbollah
Introduction Political chiefs (zucama) from a few powerful families dominated Shici politics into the 1960s and continued their control through extensive support networks. The authority of the zucama varied on their clients' support, but by the 1960s hundreds of young Shici men and women became estranged from old-style politics and were attracted by new political forces. The vision of radical change could only have been appealing to a community whose culture emphasized its exploitation and dispossession by the ruling elites. In Lebanon, as in Iraq, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait, Shica in great numbers were recruited in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s to secular opposition parties. In Lebanon the resistance took the shape of the Syrian Social Nationalist Party (SSNP), the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP), (Cooper & Erlanger, 2011) the Organization for Communist Labor Action, and pro-Syrian and pro-Iraqi factions of the Arab Socialist Bacth (or “Resurrection”) Party. Predominantly in the case of the Communist organizations and the SSNP, there was an intrinsic ideological pull towards parties that damned the tribal, religious, or cultural bases of discrimination (Mazetti & Shanker, 2012).