Essay Topic Hub

Broadway
Essays

149+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Broadway sits at the intersection of art, commerce, and culture, making it a compelling subject across business, humanities, and performing arts courses. As one of the most commercially significant entertainment industries in New York and the nation, it raises questions about production economics, audience development, and the cultural marketplace. Students examine how musicals and plays function not only as artistic works but as business ventures shaped by investment, marketing, and popular demand. The recurring presence of musical theater and cultural event analysis in coursework reflects how Broadway serves as a lens for understanding broader social and economic forces.

The papers archived on this topic approach Broadway from several directions. Some focus on musical analysis, using specific pieces and their featured refrains to explore composition and meaning. Others take a cultural studies angle, treating plays and musicals as reflections of national life and identity, including the progress of African American voices in performance, as seen in work touching on figures like Amiri Baraka and texts like A Raisin in the Sun. Humanities-based assignments often involve direct engagement with live performance through cultural event analysis, grounding abstract concepts in real theatrical experience.

A strong essay on Broadway should establish a clear thesis about what a particular play, musical, or industry trend reveals — whether about business strategy, cultural representation, or artistic form. Evidence drawn from the work itself, such as structure, refrain, and purpose, tends to carry more weight than general observations about theater. The most common pitfall is treating Broadway purely as entertainment history without connecting it to the specific analytical framework the course requires.

Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
please read uploaded PROMPT doc
A postmodern film studies critique of Woody Allen's 1994 film Bullets Over Broadway and David Mamet's 2004 film Spartan. The paper seeks to approach each film in terms of the auteur theory, by noting that each has a writer-director who has scripted a film with a single protagonist. The nature of Allen's identification with his playwright protagonist, and Mamet's identification with his Special Forces op protagonist, is questioned in terms of how each film examines questions of violence and duty. Postmodernism is invoked in the conclusion to show that the modernist desire to insist upon stable meaning can easily be deconstructed: David Mamet's film could be taken as an invitation for military men to place conscience over duty, leading Mamet to a conclusion where his story could be used to justify the actions of someone like Bradley Manning.
Research Paper Doctorate
Censorship in Music
Censorship Under the Guise of Protecting the Children
Research Paper Doctorate
Anthony Quinn: life and career overview
Anthony Quinn was often thought of as being larger than life. He was a talented actor who played many diverse roles and is now a Hollywood legend.
Paper Masters
Organizational Behavior Case Analysis
This essay examines ten interviews conducted by Studs Terkel in his book "Working" as well as one additional interview conducted by the author. It examines job satisfaction in America in terms of three basic notions. The first is education, and its relation to preparedness for the workplace. The second is the sense of individual disenfranchisement in larger organizations. And the third is a sense of individual alienation in how the workplace values profits and numbers over people. The essay includes a long interview conducted in Terkel's style, which describes the daily work life of a New York theatrical agent.
Paper Doctorate
Unable to process — no title provided
SLIDES FOR A PRESENTATION OF HUMANTIES AND NURSING: CHRONIC AND TERMINAL CARE ISSUES PRESENTED IN ALICE MUNRO'S "THE DAY OF THE BUTTERFLY," BELLE & SEBASTIAN'S "IT COULD HAVE BEEN A BRILLIANT CAREER," AND TONY KUSHNER'S…
Research Paper Doctorate
Walker Evans: Life, Work, and Documentary Photography Legacy
The emergence of non-commercial still photography, in the form of an art is comparatively recent that may probably be dated from the 1930s. Just as poets use similar language as journalists, lawyers and curators, in the…
Essay Doctorate
Freshmen College Student New York, U.S. I
This essay discusses with regard to a play, Peter and the Starcatcher. The paper provides a complex description of the play, of the feelings that it puts across, and of how the actors manage to embody characters superbly. In spite of its complexity, the play is accessible to a wide range of audiences, especially taking into account that most people are likely to be familiarized with its topic.
Paper Doctorate
American Jews in film
Narration is an old age tradition that has helped for centuries in protecting the tales and stories of humans and carrying it forth from one generation to other. Where before the tradition carried forth in an oral…
Research Paper Doctorate
Documentary tradition in historical and cultural contexts
Documentary Photography: a depiction of the real world by a photographer whose intent is to communicate something of importance -- to make a comment -- that will be understood by the viewer. (Documentary Photography 12)
Research Paper Doctorate
Understanding of Death Dying and Grieving
Death and Dying Heard the Owl Call My Name