Essay Topic Hub

Dreams
Essays

2,473+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,473 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Dreams appear across multiple academic disciplines, making them a genuinely cross-cutting subject for students. In psychology and social science courses, dreams are examined as windows into unconscious thought, emotional processing, and mental health. Freudian psychoanalytic theory treats dreams as central evidence for understanding the unconscious mind, and papers engaging with that framework explore how dream interpretation became foundational to a broader theory of human psychology. Beyond clinical psychology, dreams surface in literature courses through works like A Raisin in the Sun and A Midsummer Night's Dream, where the concept carries metaphorical weight about aspiration, identity, and social possibility.

The papers archived under this topic take several distinct approaches. Some are explanatory and scientific, investigating sleep cycles and the biological or psychological reasons humans dream. Others are psychoanalytic, focusing specifically on Freud's theoretical position and what it contributes to understanding the mind. A number of papers take a literary or cultural angle, analyzing how dreams function symbolically in narratives tied to family, identity, and ambition. Personal and reflective writing also appears, connecting individual dream experiences to broader questions about life, society, and self-understanding.

A strong essay on dreams begins by clearly committing to one disciplinary lens — clinical, literary, or cultural — rather than trying to cover all three at once. Evidence carries the most weight when it is specific: a close reading of a text, a clearly explained theoretical framework, or a well-supported psychological claim. The most common pitfall is treating "dreams" too loosely, allowing the essay to drift between metaphorical ambition and literal sleep phenomena without acknowledging the distinction.

Sort by:
Paper Masters
Interpretation of Dreams by Freud
The eight page paper is not about personality psychologists in general. Chosen psychologist is Sigmund Freud and the selected book is The Interpretation of Dreams with five pages of chapter-by-chapter summaries, and three pages of analysis (i.e., what was liked/disliked, agreed with/disagreed with, and how it relates to Human Personality). Freud's book is easy to read and valuable for the study of dreams.
Paper Doctorate
Thematic analysis of Hitchcock's Psycho through film style and convention
The purpose of this five page paper is to analyze Alfred Hitchcock’s film Psycho in relation to the style, history, movement, and genre using FILM TERMINOLOGY and conventions of standard English. The essay uses a theme in the movie and explain how the director portrays that theme, using these elements: Mise en scène, Lighting, cinematography, Genre, Composition, Point of View, Suspense, Setting (Geographical, Historical, Social Milieu) and Atmosphere (Mood) to support ideas…
Research Paper Doctorate
Social Context of Hysteria in Freud\'s Time
The concept of hysteria has long been believed to be a mental affliction which primarily affects women, with the prevailing belief being that a female’s inherent frailty left them to succumb to the psychological pressures of extreme stress. The first physicians to emerge from ancient Greece coined the term hysterical to describe the mental state of women who suffer a loss of self-control, bouts of paranoid delusion, and other erratic behavior. Indeed, the word hysteria itself id actually derived from the Greek word hystera, which means uterus, because the limited extent of medical knowledge during this era left men to believe that disturbances or dysfunction within a woman’s womb. Despite the pace of progression throughout the centuries which expanded mankind’s understanding of both human anatomy and cognitive processing, this outmoded belief as to the cause of hysteria managed to survive through the age of Freud, with psychological experts at the time largely attributing the episodes of unexplainable behavior characterized as hysteria to women unable to cope with stress. By subjecting Freud’s own work on the concept of hysteria to a comparative analysis with contemporary literature and scholarly research published during Freud’s lifetime, one can begin to grasp the impact between his investigations and experiments and our modern understanding of the psychological syndromes covered by the catch-all term hysteria.
Essay Undergraduate
Applying Functionalism Conflict Theory Symbolic Interactionism to Waitressing
This is a three page paper. demonstrates understanding of the three major sociological perspectives: functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism. The essay applies each of the three perspectives to a waitressing/server job in a 3 star restaurant.analyze the job thoroughly, applies first one perspective, then a second then a third. Uses appropriate terminology, such as " manifest function", "social construction" and "competing interests" as you apply the perspective to this "waitress/server" job.
Paper Doctorate
Will the European Union Survive?
¶ … 2010, about the survival of the European Union, the critical issue being the currency crisis with the Union's primary currency, the euro, which has been adopted by many of its members.
Essay Doctorate
Dubliners Stories Deal Mortality/Death . For, \"Eveline,\"
Poor Eveline wants to change her life, needs to in fact, yet because terrified at the critical moment and is unable to do so. A close read of this short story indicates that her hesitation is linked to a theme of mortality. A perusal of several sources as well as other works in Dubliners proves these facts without any sort of doubt
Research Paper Doctorate
Early Chinese history and cultural development
This paper is about neo confucianism and its spread across China, Japan, and Korea. It details its origins along with the man responsible for its emergence, Zhu Xi. It also has 4 primary source texts from two textbooks that show how people were able to spread confucianism in schools, through political texts, etc.
Paper Masters
The horror of war
"The Things They Carried" by Tim O'Brien and the poem "Dulce et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen are compared and contrasted in this essay with the theme of "the horrors of war" The poem is a great and treasured retelling of a soldiers life amidst war and the poem is a famous depiction of death and bitterness. The essay analyzes these things in the two works.
Paper Undergraduate
Experiences in Law Enforcement
The purpose of this essay is to discuss the cognitive and rational aspects of the mind and how they have been personally incorporated within the role of a DOD special agent. This essay discusses the three step process of how to think and minimizes the importance of what to think. The career progression of a special agent is used to contextualize the practical aspects of this approach.
Essay Doctorate
Yellow Dogs and Republicans by Ricky Dobbs
This five page paper is about a book called Yellow Dogs and Republicans. The author, Ricky Dobbs, views Allan Shivers as a transitional figure in the 1950s who paved the way for two-party politics in Texas when he (the governor) rejected the political ideology of the national Democratic Party in favor of Eisenhower and the Republican Party. This essay explains how the author goes about proving this argument by answering the following questions. What historical circumstances during the 1930s and 1940s set the stage for ideological splits within the Democratic Party? What in Allan Shivers's family background predisposed him ideologically to lead the conservative wing of the Democratic Party in Texas What ideological stands did he take as lieutenant governor that displayed his conservative tendencies? During his terms as governor, what positions did he take against the national Democratic Party and the loyalists in Texas who supported the national Democrats? Why did he "defect" to Eisenhower during the presidential races of 1952 and 1956 and what was the effect that his defection had on the Democratic Party in Texas? How did Shivers's political ideology and Shivercratsthat of the "" reflect Southern conservatism - the kind that clashed with the ideology of the national Democratic Party? If Shivers made Republicanism respectable in the Democratic South during the 1950's, how does the ideology of the Republican Party in Texas today resemble the conservative Democratic Party philosophy that Shivers espoused? How effective was Dobbs in showing that Shivers did in fact prepare the way for two-party politics in Texas?