Essay Topic Hub

American History
Essays

1,959+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,959 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

American History is one of the most widely studied subjects across academic disciplines, appearing in courses ranging from survey-level undergraduate history classes to advanced seminars in political science, sociology, and cultural studies. The field examines how the United States developed as a nation — its conflicts, institutions, social movements, and transformations over time. What makes it academically compelling is the tension between competing narratives about power, identity, and belonging, as events like the Civil War, Japanese American internment during World War II, and landmark legal decisions such as Roe v. Wade reveal deep contradictions within American society. Figures like John Brown and frameworks like Frederick Jackson Turner's Frontier Thesis further illustrate how individuals and ideas have shaped national identity in contested ways.

Student papers on this topic take a wide variety of approaches. Some focus on specific turning points or conflicts, such as the causes of the Civil War or the political consequences of the French and Indian War. Others adopt case-study formats, examining events like the Tulsa Lynching of 1921 or Japanese American internment through ethnographic or social lenses. Critical and comparative analyses also appear frequently, including film critiques, book reviews, and essays applying sociological theories to historical patterns of discrimination and federal power expansion.

A strong essay in this area begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim about an entire era. Evidence drawn from primary sources, court records, or well-documented historical events carries the most weight. The most common pitfall to avoid is treating American history as a single unified story — the strongest essays acknowledge complexity, contradiction, and the experiences of groups whose perspectives have often been marginalized.

1,959 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Equality: One Small Step at a Time
The right of same-sex couples to marry could not be less relevant to my life, but I cannot help but notice our apparent inability to learn from past experience as a nation. Simultaneously with the historic election of…
Paper Undergraduate
Dissecting a Senseless, Violent Mass
¶ … dissecting a senseless, violent mass murder at Virginia Tech.
Research Paper Undergraduate
No matter concepts and applications
The Cherokee nation was removed from its native lands in 1838 - at the command of President Andrew Jackson and the United States government. The removal of the Cherokee was simultaneously an effort to neuter the most…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Unequal Power Relations: Biomedical Ethics,
One's membership in a racial, ethic, religious, or cultural group can easily determine one's place in society, particularly if the group to which one belongs is not considered to be representative of the majority…
Paper Undergraduate
Death Penalty the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court Got it Wrong: U.S. v. Bass
Paper Doctorate
Liberty and Fear Anti-Terrorist Politics:
Anti-terrorist politics: A return to the Cold War mindset in a post-Soviet world 'It can't happen here.' For the many individuals who never witnessed the McCarthy hysteria of the 1950s, the idea that Americans could…
Essay Doctorate
Television History: From Invention to Public Consciousness
Television's evolution is both familiar and unexpected, because although it developed along the same lines as radio and film, the effect it had was much more dramatic. Television was created within mass media, rather than as a founding element of the mass media, and so it affected the public differently. When viewed in the context of the twentieth century, television's more important effect was the way it transitioned entertainment away from uniform experience to the multiplicity of products seen today with the internet.
Research Paper Doctorate
Killing the Messenger: A Century of Media Criticism Reviewed
Killing the Messenger: 100 Years of Media Criticism contains a collection of fifteen essays on media criticism. A UC Berkeley Graduate School Dean at the time of publication, Editor Tom Goldstein's selections span…
Research Paper Doctorate
Out of the Dust by Karen Hasse Course Education 410 Teaching Reading in Middle Schools
Out of the Dust -- the Depression in Adolescent Poetry
Essay Doctorate
Marxist and Freudian literary criticism applied to The Grapes of Wrath
When John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath was published on March 14, 1939, it created a national sensation by focusing on the devastating effects of the Great Depression. Beyond the setting, though, which is important…