Essay Topic Hub

Benjamin Franklin
Essays

202+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

202 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Benjamin Franklin stands as one of the most examined figures in American history and literature, making him a frequent subject in courses ranging from early American history and political science to rhetoric and literature. His roles as a statesman, inventor, writer, and founding father give him unusual breadth as a subject: students can approach him as a political thinker who shaped American independence, as a self-made figure whose autobiography defined a national ideal, or as a scientist whose inventions reshaped everyday life. Gordon S. Wood's The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin appears among the sources students draw on, reflecting how scholarly interpretation of Franklin continues to evolve and generate debate.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on Franklin's inventions and their lasting impact on society, while others treat his life in Philadelphia and his complicated relationship with England as windows into colonial American history. Comparative essays place Franklin alongside contemporaries such as Thomas Paine or Jonathan Edwards to examine contrasting visions of America. A smaller cluster of papers analyzes Franklin's use of humor and his identity as an author, treating his writings as literary texts rather than purely historical documents.

A strong essay on Benjamin Franklin requires a focused thesis rather than a broad biographical survey. The most persuasive papers choose a specific dimension — his political philosophy, his rhetorical strategies, a particular invention's social effects — and support claims with close reading of primary sources or well-chosen historical evidence. The most common pitfall is treating Franklin as a symbol rather than a complex historical person, which flattens analysis and weakens the argument.

Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Iroquois Confederacy Following a Peace
Following a peace treaty with France in 1701, The Iroquois Confederacy, which had been allied with the British through much of the 17th century, took a newly neutral role. As the controllers of the passable territory…
Essay Doctorate
Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin Benjamin Franklin\'s Autobiography
Benjamin's Franklin's autobiography is widely considered to be one of the most important early examples of American literature, because his recollections not only offer important insights into the historical and social context of their writing, but also because Franklin himself attempted to imbue his autobiography with a distinct authorial voice and a number of important themes. Paramount among these is the theme of self-improvement, and at every stage in his narration Franklin attempts to demonstrate his own process of self-improvement so that it might serve as a model for others. However, when considering Franklin's reported attempts at self-improvement in the context of his own political, professional, and personal ideology, it becomes clear that his autobiography is less a self-effacing tale of overcoming adversity and challenge and more of a self-serving ideological statement, meant to reinforce and perpetuate the system of racial and gender privilege that treated Franklin so well.
Paper Masters
History of Western Art
Looking at the Dutch works, provide some examples where dramatic stylistic elements heighten the power of everyday scenes and still lives. Think about lighting effects, movement, extension or recession of space, and…
Paper Doctorate
Benjamin Franklin Has Long Been
Benjamin Franklin has long been regarded as the most American of Americans (Pangle 2007). He is the embodiment of what we are and what we all as Americans aspire to be. He was a self-made man, clever, skeptical,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Fall of the Roman Republic
One of America's founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin, when asked the question, "What kind of government is it?" is credited with responding, "You have a republic - if you can keep it." There is no reliable source for…
Paper Undergraduate
Shattered Glass Is a 2003
Shattered Glass is a 2003 film directed by Billy Ray. It chronicles the story of then 24-year-old Stephen Glass who is on top of the world with his position as the youngest writer/editor at the nationally renowned New…
Paper Undergraduate
Age of Enlightenment the Eighteenth
The eighteenth century was the age of revolutions and wars of independence around the world. The century is commonly known as the "age of enlightenment," but one could also refer to it as the age of "humankind's…
Paper Undergraduate
How the exercise of leadership depends on understanding organizational politics
Leadership and the Politics of Organizations
Paper Doctorate
Colonial Period in America What
Colonial Period in America Introduction Question ONE: What factors during the Colonial period hindered or promoted national identity? A what point did nationalism become a major influence – why? The national identity of the young nation was formed as time went on and it became clear that the mother country, England, was just not relevant to the needs of the colonists, and in fact the king had become an impediment to the sense of nation for America. In the book Performing Patriotism: National identity in the Colonial and Revolutionary American Theatre, the author, Jason Shaffer, discusses the theatre – college plays, the occasional street theatre-based protests by the Sons of Liberty, and the "closet dramas" – during the colonial and Revolutionary periods. Reviewing the book in the peer-reviewed publication, Theatre History Studies, critic Odai Johnson comments that while Shaffer's work was not inclusive of all the theatre during the colonial period, Shaffer did present about half of the plays that were produced in early America. One of those plays, Cato, by John Addison, was performed on May 10, 1774, in Charleston, South Carolina, and was the last "patriotic" production prior to the Revolutionary War, Johnson explains. At that very time in early American history, Johnson points out, Boston Harbor was "…under a blockade" and in two months the Continental Congress would be choosing delegates (Johnson, 2009, p. 235). Still, notwithstanding the tensions in the young country at the time, the young players in Cato "…were optimistic enough to secure a fifteen-year lease on the building" in Charleston, and they sent to England for more "scenes and actors" (Johnson, 236).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Declaration of independence and bill of rights
What things would I eliminate from the Declaration of Independence? And why? If I were a member of the Continental Congress of the United States in July of 1776, I would have insisted that the document reflect slavery.