Essay Topic Hub

Afterlife
Essays

489+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

The afterlife is one of the most enduring subjects in religious and humanistic scholarship, asking fundamental questions about what happens to the soul and body after death. Students encounter this topic across courses in religious studies, philosophy, history, literature, and art history. Its academic interest lies in how beliefs about death and the afterlife shape entire cultures, moral systems, and artistic traditions. Works such as Everyman and The Epic of Gilgamesh offer early textual evidence of how human communities have struggled to make sense of mortality, while ancient civilizations including Old Kingdom Egypt and classical Greek and Roman societies developed rich mythological frameworks around the soul, the dead, and the meaning of existence beyond life.

Student papers on this topic approach the afterlife from several distinct angles. Historical and civilizational surveys trace how beliefs evolved across ancient cultures, from Egyptian burial practices to Greek and Roman mythology. Literary analyses examine how canonical texts represent death and what lies beyond it, with figures like Beowulf and Achilles serving as comparative models of heroic mortality. Other papers take a more philosophical or sociological angle, engaging with death anxiety and the psychological functions that afterlife beliefs serve. Art history essays explore how visual culture has long depicted the dead, heaven, and the body's fate.

A strong essay on the afterlife needs a focused thesis that connects belief or representation to a specific cultural, literary, or historical context rather than surveying the subject too broadly. Evidence drawn from primary sources — myths, literary texts, or historical records — carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating afterlife beliefs as universal rather than showing how their meaning is shaped by the particular culture or tradition under examination.

489 papers
Sort by:
Paper Masters
Poetry case study analysis
The poems of Emily Dickinson have been interpreted in many ways and often it is hard to separate the narrator of her works with the woman who wrote them. Dickinson lived such a small and sad little life that it is easy…
Paper High School
Poetry explication and textual analysis
The paper is a close reading of the poem "A Curse Against Elegies" by Anne Sexton. The paper goes line by line, stanza by stanza, closing examining the words and lines for a deeper meaning. There are themes of control (and lack thereof), of loneliness, and internal conflict. The poem centers around an argument between the author and the abstraction of love, as well as with those who are dead and refuse to listen.
Paper Undergraduate
Grief counseling approaches and therapeutic interventions
Experiencing loss can have a long-term effect on a person, especially if that loss is deeply personal, such as the loss of a loved one. Grief counseling thus exists to ease a person through the grief process, which is…
Paper Doctorate
Religious Life of Planet Earth
The objective of this study is to assume that the writer is from another planet and has been sent to Earth to determine if it is a religious planet or not. The superiors are expecting a report from this writer who will…
Research Paper Doctorate
Literature review and analysis
comparison of the Catholicism aspects in Scott's Ivanhoe and Twain's a Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
Research Paper Doctorate
Life after death: perspectives and evidence
Introduction classical point of departure in defining Death seems to be Life itself. Death is perceived either as a cessation of Life - or as a "transit area," on the way to a continuation of Life by other means.
Research Paper Doctorate
Character Analysis in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
¶ … Big Daddy," in Tennessee William's "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof."
Thesis Undergraduate
Writings of Clare of Assisi and female power
Saint Clare of Assisi was not a feminist in the modern sense, but then again no such ideas existed at all in the 13th Century. By all accounts, though, she was a formidable and powerful woman who was the first in…
Paper Undergraduate
Tale of Two Cities One
There is a subtle element of foreshadowing through Charles Dickens' novel A Tale of Two City. The author demonstrates such foreshadowing through the themes of good supplanting evil, as well as through emblems representative of Jesus. The ending in which Carton redeems his character by saving the lives of his friends is alluded to throughout the story.
Paper Undergraduate
Origins, Ideology, and Low Recruitment in Islamic Terrorism
¶ … Terrorism and the Low Numbers of Practicing Terrorists