Essay Topic Hub

Grief
Essays

1,128+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,128 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Grief is the emotional and psychological response to loss, most often associated with death but extending to divorce, illness, and other profound life changes. Students across psychology, counseling, nursing, social work, and literature courses regularly write about grief because it sits at the intersection of human experience and clinical practice. The topic carries academic weight partly because of frameworks like the Kübler-Ross model, which outlines recognizable stages including anger and depression, giving students a structured lens through which to examine a deeply personal process. Understanding how individuals move through grief also raises important questions about culture, identity, and what it means to cope, making it relevant well beyond any single discipline.

The archived papers approach grief from several distinct angles. Some take a clinical or theoretical route, analyzing the grieving process through stage models or conducting concept analyses of grief and loss as defined terms. Others apply psychological frameworks to cultural texts, examining how films and literary works such as "The Story of an Hour" represent mourning and emotional recovery. Counseling-focused papers explore group therapy and divorce recovery, while case studies raise ethical questions about researching grief without consent. A smaller set of papers addresses grief in specific populations, such as individuals with schizophrenia, or investigates expressive writing as a therapeutic tool.

A strong essay on grief requires a clearly scoped thesis — arguing for a specific claim about the grieving process, a treatment approach, or a textual interpretation rather than simply describing stages. Evidence drawn from psychological research, clinical case material, or close textual analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating grief as a linear, universal experience; the strongest papers acknowledge individual variation and challenge oversimplified models directly.

1,128 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Individual\'s Power to Change Self-Defeating
¶ … individual's power to change self-defeating patterns and emotional reactions.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hamlet's grappling with revenge and madness
Revenge and Madness in Shakespeare's "Hamlet" -- Why are the two interlinked?
Paper Undergraduate
Technical Instructions for Coronary Artery
Technical Instructions for Coronary Artery Bypass Graph Surgery
Research Paper Doctorate
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein: themes and literary significance
Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Shelley conceived her well-known novel, "Frankenstein," when she, her husband Percy Bysshe Shelley and their friends were at a house party near Geneva in 1816 and she was challenged to come up…
Paper Doctorate
Weight of War in the Things They
Weight of War in "The Things They Carried"
Research Paper Undergraduate
War's effects on society and economy
The traumas and deficiencies of war inflict unpredictable and disastrous effects on the family. Roles and responsibilities are often dramatically altered (Victorian Foundation for Survivors of Torture and Trauma 1996).
Paper Undergraduate
Responsibilities of the Vice President in the absence of the President
Throughout the two hundred and fifty year history of the United States, the men who held the highest office in the land, the Presidency of the United States of America, have faced many overwhelming and dangerous…
Research Paper Doctorate
Black History Negro Baseball League
The history of the Negro League in baseball has recently received new interest after a half a century of benign neglect. Baseball fans realize that Blacks played baseball before 1974, of course, because they know that…
Paper Doctorate
Arguments against the death penalty
Today, the United States is virtually the only remaining industrialized and democractic nation in the world to apply the death penalty, although a few other countries have the options on their books but the punishment…
Paper Doctorate
Laura, \"The Garden Party,\" Respond Neddy\'s Cross
Katherine Mansfield's short story "The Garden Party" and John Cheever's short story "The Swimmer" both go at presenting readers with ideas related to upper class feelings toward society in general.