Essay Topic Hub

Drama
Essays

1,300+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,300 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Drama is one of the oldest and most enduring forms of artistic expression, and it occupies a central place in courses ranging from literature and theatre history to education and cultural studies. Students are drawn to it because it sits at the intersection of text and performance, raising questions about how language, action, and spectacle work together to create meaning. Works such as Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House, Molière's Tartuffe, Sophocles's Oedipus, and August Wilson's Fences appear frequently in academic curricula, and frameworks like the Aristotelian approach to drama give students analytical tools for examining plot, character, and audience experience across centuries and traditions.

The essays collected here take a wide range of approaches. Some are historical, tracing drama's origins or examining seventeenth- and eighteenth-century European theatre. Others focus on close literary analysis of specific plays, including works by Suzan-Lori Parks and Robert Browning. Comparative approaches place multiple texts in conversation, while thematic studies explore how stage characters navigate family conflict, identity, and morality. Some papers extend into education, looking at how process drama can foster reading motivation, and others investigate non-Western dramatic traditions such as the Japanese Noh play as reexamined by Ezra Pound.

A strong essay on drama anchors its thesis in the relationship between dramatic form and meaning — how structure, dialogue, and stagecraft shape what an audience understands and feels. Textual evidence from the play itself carries the most weight, supported where relevant by performance context or critical frameworks. The most common pitfall is treating drama purely as literature and neglecting the fact that plays are written for the stage, where action, timing, and physical presence are essential to interpretation.

1,300 papers
Sort by:
Essay Undergraduate
Five Approaches and Theory
Qualitative research tends to focus upon the results of a study and then use those results to support a theory, versus the deductive methodology of data-driven quantitative research. This paper explores the different methodologies deployed in qualitative inquiry and the extent to which theory is used in all of them: ethnography, case studies, narrative inquiries, phenomenology, and grounded theory.
Paper Undergraduate
Playwright\'s Guidebook by Stuart Spencer the Playwright\'s
The Playwright's Guidebook: An Insightful Primer on the Art of Dramatic Writing
Paper High School
Characters Comparison in Waiting for Godot
Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot depicts two vagabonds, Vladimir and Estragon, as its central characters: to the extent that the play's structure accommodates a traditional protagonist, one of them -- or both…
Paper Undergraduate
The EU and the Cyprus problem: struggle for justice and compromise
Turkey Rejects UN s Mediator on Solution of Cyprus Problem
Paper High School
Debussy\'s Music Pelleas and Melisande
I found this opera to be enjoyable from the vey onset. I knew nothing of the opera and knew just a little of the story/myth from antiquity of Pelleas and Melisande. At the time of my viewing, I did have a solid…
Research Paper Masters
Interpersonal conflict: causes, dynamics, and resolution strategies
American Beauty (Spacey, Bening and Birch) is a 1999 Film with many interpersonal conflicts that are never resolved. Basically a comedy and drama about Lester Burnham's mid-life crisis but also showing the personal…
Paper Undergraduate
Male and Female Relationships in Calabash Parkway
The objective of this research study is to examine the male and female relationships in the work entitled ‘Calabash Parkway' written by Brenda Chester DoHarris published by Tantaria Press in 2005. Towards this end, this study will conduct a review of literature and specifically reviews of other writers on the work of DoHarris.
Essay Masters
Comparative analysis of writing styles in Gilman, Fitzgerald, and Baldwin
Over the course of the late 19th and early 20th century, American literature began to turn inward. Instead of looking to outer manifestations of the human character, American authors began to use interior monologues as…
Paper Undergraduate
Elisa Allen and Neddy Merril.
What John Steinbeck's "The Chrysanthemums" and John Cheever's "The swimmer" have in common is their symbolic nature underneath a story that resembles what may appear as representations of typical events in one's life. Underneath that appearance though, there is a layer of internal struggle culminating with self identification of the characters. In the following, we will attempt to analyze how that happens for each of the characters and we will specifically address how the authors use symbolism to illustrate the process.
Essay Masters
Woman in World History
It can sometimes be difficult to decipher whether it is the individual that defines the times or the times that define the individual. This is the duality that is at the center of the present discussion on several historical texts featuring female protagonists. The essay offers an explanation of how Elizabeth Marsh, Henriette Caillaux and Eugenia Ginzburg are not drivers of history but women whose stories can tell us a lot about the past.