Essay Topic Hub

Fairy Tale
Essays

131+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Fairy tales occupy a central place in literary studies because they sit at the intersection of folklore, cultural mythology, and imaginative storytelling. Students across literature, film studies, and cultural studies courses engage with this topic because fairy tales reveal how societies transmit values, fears, and ideals across generations. Works like The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and Angela Carter's "The Company of Wolves" appear as touchstones, and the genre extends into film and magical realism, making it relevant to discussions of texts by Gabriel Garcia Marquez and cinematic works like The Spirit of the Beehive. The genre's deceptive simplicity—stories built around young girls, family, home, and desire—invites serious interrogation of what those familiar elements actually enforce or resist.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Close reading is common, with writers analyzing specific passages for symbolism, color, and character motivation. Comparative essays set two stories or adaptations side by side to trace how a tale shifts across cultures or media. Historical and cultural analysis examines how figures like Disney reshaped the genre for mass audiences, while other papers explore Eastern influences on Western fairy tale traditions. Some writers approach the genre through a moral or psychological lens, as in readings that connect Snow White to the seven deadly sins.

A strong essay on fairy tales needs a focused thesis that moves beyond plot summary toward an argument about what the story does culturally or symbolically. Evidence drawn from the text's specific language, imagery, and structure carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating fairy tales as simple children's entertainment rather than as deliberate constructions that encode and sometimes challenge social norms around gender, family, and power.

Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Fantasy Themes in the Princess
Fantasy Themes in the Princess Bride and Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Research Paper Undergraduate
Eiffel Tower - An Icon
The Eiffel Tower seizes the imagination, it is something unexpected, fantastic, which flatters our smallness..." (Quote by an Italian visitor to the Exposition Universelle 1889); (Thompson 2000).
Research Paper Doctorate
Feminist Therapy and Postmodern Approaches
Feminists have purported that male and female perspectives on life have been developed from early childhood in different ways. Men view the world in terms of power and competition, or hierarchy.
Research Paper Doctorate
Moral Message in Children\'s Literature
I chose four children's classics: Charlotte's web (1952) by E.B. White, and other three children's fairy tales, two by Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm (Cinderella and Snow white and the seven dwarfs) and one by Charles Perrault…
Research Paper Undergraduate
James Joyce\'s Araby and Haruki
James Joyce's "Araby" and Haruki Muraka's "On Seeing the 100% Perfect Girl One Beautiful April Morning"
Paper Undergraduate
Becoming American: immigration and national identity
Chitra Bajerjee Divakaruni and Eric Liu are two successful Americans who have mainly three things in common that come to mind at a first glance at their biographies: their nationality (they are both American), their…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Little Red Riding Hood: Morality, Psychology, and Feminism
Stories have been part of culture from the very beginning of human development. The pre-historic cave paintings in France, for example, depict tales about hunting trips. Over time, fables and fairy tales have continued…
Paper Masters
Reaction paper analysis and critical response
¶ … Abortion," Anne Sexton repeats the line, "Somebody who should have been born / is gone." The narrator treats abortion as "loss without death," indicating that an abortion falls into a moral grey area.
Paper Doctorate
Tales Charles Perrault Was Responsible for Collecting
This essay examines how Charles Perrault's use of wild and domesticated animals in his fairy tales serves to reify repressive ideologies regarding class and gender. Male characters are rewarded with animal helpers that allow them to reach the upper classes, while female characters are associated with dangerous wild animals and must suffer if they are to receive any kind of reward. While Perrault was mostly just enacting the ideology of 1690s France, this analysis demonstrates the importance of criticizing popular works in order to see their underlying ideological functions.
Essay Doctorate
Defining elements of Cinderella across multiple fairy tale variants
¶ … Red Riding Hood and its variants is one of the best known fairy tales, but the different versions of a little girl's experiences while going to visit her grandmother have textual differences which serve to change…