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.

Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Gender Differences and Acceptance
¶ … Anna in the Tropics" by Nilo Cruz is about literature and the role it plays for humanity, about the war between sexes, about similarities and more importantly, about differences in humans, about divide and…
Essay Doctorate
Analyzing Poetry Form Structure Line Imagery
There is not much to hope for in Ariel Dorfman's "Hope." A citizen of Chile when the Pinochet regime led a coup over President Allende, Dorfman experienced what it was like to have friends captured and tortured by the…
Paper Masters
Madoff S Ponzi Scheme and How it Could Have Been Prevented
Business Ethics - Contemporary Case 2: Madoff's Investment Firm
Thesis Undergraduate
Psychoanalytic Model Object Relations
In this paper, the object relations psychoanalytic model will be employed for solving a family issue; the family in question is taken from movie. The paper will further delineate key object relations concepts, the…
Paper Doctorate
Healing and Loss in Nelson S I Ll Give You the Sun
¶ … New Identity through Healing in Nelson's I'll Give You the Sun: A Feminist Critique
Essay Doctorate
The Cause of Medea S Affliction in the Play by Euripides
Life was hard for women in Greece (or Corinth) as Medea notes in her 1st speech, when she calls upon the "white wolf of lightning to leap" and "burst" her and "cling to these breasts" like a baby.
Essay Doctorate
Literary Devices in the Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin
When the joy of liberation turns into the shock of oppression, the life can go out of an individual. This is what happens to Mrs. Mallard in "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin. What is ironic about the story is that…
Research Paper Masters
Exploring the Life of Pi Novel
[Author Name(s), First M. Last, Omit Titles and Degrees]
Essay Doctorate
Using Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Grieving Families
¶ … Efficacious Interventions for Grieving Families
Essay Undergraduate
Wolterstorff S Lament for a Son and Grieving
¶ … Five Stages of Grief and Wolterstorff's Lament