Essay Topic Hub

Bartleby
Essays

317+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Herman Melville's short story "Bartleby, the Scrivener" is a foundational text in American literature courses and is widely studied in undergraduate English and humanities classes. Published in 1853, the story follows a passive, enigmatic law copyist whose repeated refusal to comply — expressed through the phrase "I would prefer not to" — raises profound questions about labor, free will, alienation, and the limits of human connection. Its brevity makes it an accessible entry point for literary analysis, while its ambiguity rewards close reading and sustains serious critical debate.

Student papers on this topic most commonly take an analytical approach focused on character, theme, and narrative structure. Many examine the relationship between Bartleby and the unnamed narrator, exploring how power, sympathy, and helplessness interact in a Wall Street office setting. Others connect the story to Melville's biography and artistic development, reading Bartleby as a figure for the frustrated writer or the alienated worker. The recurring focus on characters like Turkey, the narrator's other scriveners, and the Wall Street environment suggests that papers frequently situate the story within its social and economic context.

A strong essay on "Bartleby, the Scrivener" builds a focused thesis around a specific interpretive claim — for example, what the narrator's failure to act reveals about complicity or moral responsibility — rather than simply summarizing plot. Textual evidence drawn from the story's dialogue, imagery, and setting typically carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating Bartleby as purely symbolic without grounding that interpretation in the story's specific language and events.

317 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Melville and Irving: comparative literary analysis
The dawn of the American nation brought with it a need for a decidedly American culture, one depicted with careful precision by many of the authors that came to paint the literary landscape of the new magnate across the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Conformity and rebellion in social behavior
Conformity and Rebellion in Works by Amy Tan, Martin Luther King Jr., Herman Melville, and Shirley Jackson
Paper Doctorate
Liberty, Mills Approaches the Issue of Governmental
¶ … Liberty, Mills approaches the issue of governmental and societal tyranny. He approaches three basic areas in which liberty in important, in addition to discussing the problem of tyranny which can abridge those…
Research Paper Doctorate
Alexander the Great: life and conquests
There is not much more that can be said about Alexander the Great. He has been the subject of countless books, several movies, and hundreds of years of speculation. People have varying opinions about Alexander.
Research Paper Doctorate
Loyalist Arguments -- a Persuasive
Loyalist Arguments -- a Persuasive Plea to Remain tied to Great Britain
Research Paper Doctorate
Classical Causes of Criminal Behavior
No crime can ever be defended on rational grounds." (Livius, 1996)
Research Paper Doctorate
Settlement at Burlington Northern Railway
"No fair - you cheated!" This complaint often heard, when a child feels he lost because someone didn't play by the rules, embodies one perception of the word, "fair." Concepts of this multifaceted word, however, involve…
Paper Masters
Hear America Singing, Walt Whitman Is Able
¶ … Hear America Singing, Walt Whitman is able to capture the industrial spirit of the times. In the poem, Whitman is able to demonstrate how each profession and industry described contributes to a grander purpose…
Research Paper Doctorate
Modernist writers and their connections to modernist traditions
Modernism in Literature: Comparative Analysis of the works of Ernest Hemingway and T.S. Eliot
Paper Doctorate
Selected readings and course materials
This essay responds to a set of thirteen separate readings on American literature, including works by Jonathan Edwards, Ben Franklin, Washington Irving, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Philip Freneau, Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson. It also includes two five-hundred-word essays, one about Nathaniel Hawthorne's story "Young Goodman Brown" and the other about Washington Irving's story "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow". In all cases, historical information about the period of American history before the Civil War is adduced to help interpret the literary works.