Essay Topic Hub

Dialogue
Essays

2,135+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,135 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Dialogue, as an academic subject, extends well beyond ordinary conversation to encompass the structured exchange of ideas across philosophy, literature, politics, and pedagogy. Students encounter it in communications courses, literary studies, political science, and education programs, among others. What makes dialogue academically rich is its role as both a form and a force — it shapes how meaning is constructed, how society negotiates competing ideas, and how individuals come to understand reality. Thinkers such as Paulo Freire and figures like John Locke, Karl Marx, Mohandas Gandhi, and Socrates appear in these discussions because their ideas were themselves built through intellectual exchange and debate.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some use literary analysis to examine how dialogue functions within specific works, such as Robert Frost's "The Death of the Hired Man" or Gabriel García Márquez's "Chronicle of a Death Foretold" alongside Shakespeare's "Hamlet," exploring how spoken exchange reveals theme, character, and conflict. Others take a philosophical angle, reconstructing imagined conversations between historical thinkers to test competing views of society, justice, or human nature. Still others focus on institutional or pedagogical contexts, analyzing how dialogue operates in teaching, international political bodies, or religious tradition.

A strong essay on dialogue grounds its thesis in a clear definition of what kind of dialogue is under examination — literary, political, philosophical, or pedagogical — since conflating these can weaken an argument. Evidence drawn from close reading of texts or documented exchanges carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating dialogue as mere talk rather than analyzing the power dynamics, assumptions, and ideas that shape what gets said and what remains unspoken.

2,135 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Plato's philosophy and influence
A DEFENSE OF PLATO'S IDEA OF THE GOOD IN HIS REPUBLIC
Paper High School
Brian Williams, a Network News Anchor, Recently
Brian Williams, a network news anchor, recently wrote a column lamenting the fact that people no longer watch network news because they are too wrapped up in the dynamic social world to be discovered on the web.
Paper Undergraduate
Cross-national management practices and frameworks
This paper discusses some of the challenges of cross-cultural management. The first question deals with the problems of American-Chinese business dealings. The second question deals with managing the differences between front-of-house hotel staff and back-of-house hotel staff at an international hotel chain. The third question deals with international teams in the global environment.
Research Paper Doctorate
Current issues in contemporary society
¶ … Japan be seen as a Model for Understanding of 'Asian Modernities'
Research Paper Doctorate
Aquinas's Five Ways: Reason, Faith, and Their Limits
Aquinas and His "Five Ways," an Expression of Assumed Faith
Research Paper Doctorate
Nursing Client Relationships and How the Study
¶ … nursing client relationships and how the study is a valid research for practitioners. It has 26 sources in Harvard Style.
Research Paper Doctorate
Death in Robert Frost\'s Poems Robert Frost
Robert Frost was an American poet who was known for his literary works (poems) that depict the theme of "dark meditations" and psychological complexity in the subjects of his poem, according to an article by the web…
Essay Doctorate
Ibsen's A Doll's House: Feminism and Modern Tragedy
Now recognized as the "Father of Realism" and one of the founders of the European Modernist movement, Norwegian playwright and poet Henrik Ibsen began life as the child of a well-to-do merchant family in the portside town of Skein. Although Ibsen's first few years of life would be considered rather idyllic, his father's unexpected fall from financial grace into a state of bankruptcy precipitated a tumultuous adolescence defined by Ibsen's father routinely mistreating his family. In the words of one Ibsen biographer, "always an authoritarian, Knud Ibsen became a family tyrant, visiting his bitterness and resentment on his wife and children" (Templeton 4), with this introduction to the powerless state inflicted upon women – and the abuses they suffer in silence – serving as a catalyst for the writer's subsequent literary portrayals of victimized female figures transforming into tragic heroines. The conflicted Ibsen soon began exploring creative outlets for the internalized frustration he felt towards his father, writing deeply reflective prose, along with tragic plays featuring characters who echoed his parent's own tortured marital dynamic. Although many of his initial forays into the world of dramatic literature proved to be fruitless, Ibsen persevered throughout his adolescence and adulthood, penning several works combing tragic elements with the realism of European Modernism. It was not until Ibsen reached his late thirties that his work as a playwright began to pay financial dividends, and only during his self-imposed exile to the European nations of Italy and Germany did he begin to infuse his work with the scathing social commentary that propelled A Doll's House into realm of literary discussion.
Paper Undergraduate
Sandel, Locke, and Rawls on Justice and the Common Good
In "A Politics of the Common Good," Michael Sandel defends the idea of reintroducing the concept of "virtue" into American political debates (261-269). Sandel contends that our political discourse has become…
Essay Undergraduate
Descartes and his philosophical contributions
Descartes is widely considered the father of modern philosophy otherwise called epistemology. His skepticism about religion earned him earned him enemies and friends. This study has clarified Descartes’ argument about the existing relationship between the two: God applies science in several instances of nature development. The archaic believe about God’s creation and the universe as products of superstition and not science has been discredited.