Essay Topic Hub

Editorial
Essays

322+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

An editorial is a form of opinion-driven writing in which an author advances a clear argument, typically on a matter of public, social, or cultural concern. Students across English composition, journalism, media studies, and communications courses engage with editorials both as writers and as critical analysts. What makes the form academically interesting is its demand for deliberate rhetorical construction: a strong editorial must balance persuasive appeal with credible evidence, making it a practical testing ground for argumentation theory and rhetorical analysis alike.

The papers archived here approach editorials from several distinct angles. Some focus on argument structure and the identification of logical weaknesses, as seen in work examining editorial fallacies and the mechanics of claims. Others take a media and cultural perspective, analyzing how editorial voices operate within dominant media economies or appear in venues such as high-end women's magazines. Additional papers move into applied domains, using an editorial framework to propose solutions to policy questions like illegal immigration or to evaluate issues in fields such as nursing practice and consumer behavior. Historical and literary subjects also appear, with authors and cultural figures treated through an argumentative editorial lens.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused, contestable thesis rather than a broad summary of an issue. Evidence that carries the most weight is specific — direct quotations, documented examples, or traceable claims that can be evaluated for credibility and relevance. One common pitfall is conflating personal opinion with reasoned argument; effective editorial writing and analysis both depend on showing how a message is constructed and supported, not simply asserting that a position is correct.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Freedom of the press
The Freedom Of The Press To Cover The War In Iraq
Paper Undergraduate
Who\'s Controlling Our Emotions Emotional Literacy as a Mechanism for Social Control?
At the core of becoming an activist educator
Essay Doctorate
Cross Cultural Age of Globalization the Quickening
The quickening pace of globalization continues to force varying cultures, their expectations, norms, value and practices together at a pace that is much faster than had been the case in the past.
Essay Doctorate
Pursuant to the Proposed Community Transit Policy
Pursuant to the proposed community transit policy entitled, "Bus Efficiency Policy (BEP)," dated, 11 June 2011, please permit me, a humble but concerned citizen of the Santa Clara Valley metropolitan area to illustrate…
Research Paper Doctorate
Bureaucratic power and its effects on environmental policy
¶ … Power of the Bureaucracy on the Environment
Paper Doctorate
An investigation of the lithographic printing industry in Nigeria
This study's aim was to investigate and explore the future of the lithographic printing industry and identify new approaches sustaining the Nigerian lithographic printing industry. This aim was supported by several objectives that were achieved through a series of chapters devoted to specific issues of interest, including the past, present and the future of the lithographic industry; major constraints affecting the lithographic printing industry and the effect of the Quality Management System on the lithographic industry. The study concludes with salient recommendations for the Nigerian lithographic printing industry.
Paper Undergraduate
NRA Prying the Government Out
Prying the Government Out of their Cold, Dead Hands: United States Policy and the National Rifle Association
Research Paper Doctorate
Grief and loss: psychological and social dimensions
This work intends to outline the theoretical explanations of grief, in particular Worden's tasks of grief. Further this work intends to explore the role of the nurse in the support and care of an individual who is…
Essay Doctorate
Toxins Cause Autism? The Jury Is Still
Nicholas Kristoff's writes about the issue of environmental toxins and autism, and the link between exposure to these toxins and the rise in autism spectrum disorders. Autism comprises a clinically heterogeneous group…
Paper Doctorate
John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry: abolitionist martyr or terrorist
This essay examines the impact of John Brown's Harper's Ferry raid on the abolition of slavery. Brown has variously been referred to as a madman, terrorist, and murderer; others have called him a saint, hero, and a martyr. Regardless of one's opinion of Brown the human being, his place in history and his impact on ending slavery cannot be denied. Deranged or no, Brown was a driven man who lived the courage of his convictions. There can be little doubt that Brown's raid advanced the cause of abolition by escalating the debate over slavery that was already taking place in a polarized nation.