Essay Topic Hub

Genre
Essays

1,208+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,208 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Genre is a foundational concept in the arts, referring to the categories and conventions that organize creative works — whether in literature, film, visual art, or performance. Students encounter genre across disciplines including literary studies, film studies, art history, and cultural criticism. What makes it academically interesting is the tension between genre as a stable set of rules and genre as a living, evolving form shaped by audience expectations, social context, and artistic innovation. The works and movements appearing in this body of student writing — from Rococo and Neoclassical painting to lowbrow art, from dime novels to Western film, from short fiction to hip-hop and street dance — reflect just how broadly genre operates across the arts.

The papers here approach genre from several distinct angles. Some take a comparative approach, placing two works or styles side by side to examine how each handles form and convention, as seen in analyses pairing short stories or contrasting artistic movements. Others focus on a single genre — the Western film, the crime novel, the short story — tracing its defining characteristics and cultural role. Case-study analysis is also common, with writers using a specific work or artist to illuminate broader genre questions. A few papers address how genre intersects with social change, looking at how shifting audiences and cultural moments reshape artistic categories.

A strong essay on genre establishes a clear, arguable thesis about what a genre does, not just what it is. Evidence drawn from close reading of specific texts, films, or artworks carries the most weight. One common pitfall is treating genre as a fixed checklist rather than a dynamic framework — strong essays acknowledge that the most interesting works often push against or redefine the conventions they inherit.

1,208 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Tragedy and comedy in literature
One popular method of distinguishing between a comedy and a tragedy has always been by virtue of whether a play or film has a happy or tragic ending. Today, however, it is largely considered that a tragedy can be comic…
Essay Doctorate
Why reselling is an important part of customer adoption innovation
¶ … reselling the customer an important part of the confirmation after the adoption of an innovation?
Research Paper Doctorate
American novel concepts and historical development
On the Road with Sharon Creech's Walk Two Moons
Paper High School
\"Daddy\" and \"Lady Lazarus\" by Plath
This paper is an analysis of the poetry of Sylvia Plath. The paper gives particular attention to the feminist elements of her work. The poems "Daddy" and "Lady Lazarus" are analyzed as expressions of Plath's personal biography. Both of these poems are dramatic monologues which Plath uses as a vehicle of confession and self-expression.
Research Paper Doctorate
Edward Hyde as the \'Metaphorical Monster\': Dual
Edward Hyde as the 'Metaphorical Monster': Dual Personas and the 'Repressed Self' of Henry Jekyll in the Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
Research Paper Doctorate
Too White Too Black
¶ … Race in early television programming [...] black women and the roles they played in early television. Two female characters illustrate the great differences in how blacks have been portrayed on television.
Research Paper Doctorate
Angela Y. Davis: life, activism, and intellectual contributions
Davis, Angela. Y. Blues, Legacy and Black Feminism. New York: Random House, 1999.
Paper Doctorate
Chronicle of Higher Education Written by Deborah
¶ … Chronicle of Higher Education written by Deborah Tannen, who thereby successfully decries the stealth negative impact that agonism has on society at large, with special emphasis on its presence in the educational…
Research Paper Doctorate
Cinema of the 1950s
1950s was a decade of change for the U.S. - cinema was no exception, as it modeled itself to accommodate the social changes U.S. society was going through. Films not only provide entertainment to masses but are also…
Thesis Doctorate
Paranoia and Thomas Pynchon: Bleeding Edge
This paper examines the role of paranoia as a postmodern novelistic technique in Thomas Pynchon's 2013 novel Bleeding Edge. Using critical examinations of the role played by paranoia in Pynchon's larger body of work, the paper argues that Pynchon's invocation of paranoia to narrate 21st century historical events--like the attacks of September 11 or the Bernie Madoff fraud--is not meant to provide the reader with an answer, but merely to illuminate a process of thinking.