Essay Topic Hub

Hair
Essays

1,336+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,336 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Hair is a subject that surfaces across a surprisingly wide range of academic disciplines, from biology and anatomy to literature, media studies, and personal narrative writing. In science courses, it appears as a component of the integumentary system, the body's outer layer of skin, hair, and nails. In humanities and composition classes, hair carries cultural and symbolic weight, touching on identity, gender, history, and the ways women in particular present themselves to the world. Its versatility makes it genuinely interesting academically: a single topic can bridge clinical description and deeply personal meaning depending on the course context.

The papers archived here reflect that range. Some take an analytical approach, examining advertisements and film — including work connected to F. Scott Fitzgerald's writing — to explore how hair shapes visual messaging and cultural ideals. Others are personal and descriptive, using hair as a lens for life narrative, journal reflection, or college application essays. Still others address hair in professional or applied contexts such as client health history examinations and customer service materials. Comparative and image-analysis frameworks appear alongside purely creative or expressive work.

A strong essay on hair succeeds by committing to one clear angle rather than trying to cover all of them at once. If the focus is cultural or historical, specific examples of how hair signals change, status, or identity carry the most argumentative weight. If the approach is analytical, grounding claims in a single text, image, or case keeps the thesis manageable. The most common pitfall is treating hair as merely decorative or superficial — the strongest essays recognize that it consistently points toward larger questions about identity, history, and social meaning.

1,336 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Jackie Robinson: life and legacy in baseball history
The discourse of American politics is focused on individual rights, action and identity. This trait was developed as a result of the social movements that took place during the 1950s and 1960s that highly contributed to…
Paper Doctorate
Rapunzel the Grimm Brothers\' Fairy
The Grimm brothers' fairy tale "Rapunzel" is ripe for psychoanalytic interpretation because it includes a number of peculiar textual details requiring analysis. In particular, the way the story is broken up into three…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Neanderthal/Homo Sapien Neanderthals and Homo
Neanderthals and Homo sapiens: What Really Happened?
Paper Undergraduate
Advanced nurse practitioner concepts and questions
¶ … tissue types that compose the epidermis. Name the tissue types that compose the dermis. List the major layers of the epidermis and dermis and briefly describe the individual functions of each layer.
Essay Doctorate
Sexual Liberation in Addition to Sexual Intercourse
Sexual Liberation In addition to sexual intercourse and its variations, sexual liberation refers to the universe of human issues affecting all genders. The sexually oppressed and repressed American society of the 1950's is simultaneously six decades and a universe away from today's standards. Thanks to the developments commencing in the 1960's and developing in subsequent decades, America is relatively sexually liberated. Two of those developments were the FDA approval of The Pill and the birth of the Women's Liberation Movement. Through greater reproductive freedom and the empowerment of women, these two events vitally contributed to our current sexual liberation.
Paper Doctorate
Emperor Domitian Bust the Portrait
In the East Wing of the Toledo Museum of Art is Gallery 2, also known as Classic Court. This section of the museum houses its art and artifacts from ancient Greece, Rome, and Egypt.
Paper Doctorate
Why The Waste Land and The French Lieutenant's Woman exemplify modernism and postmodernism
This paper discusses the Wasteland as an exemplary text of the Modernist Period and the French Lieutenant's Woman as an exemplary test of the Post-Modernist period. It posits that Modernism and Post-Modernism cannot be understood by reference to common features alone, but also as responses to their respective social, cultural, and political contexts. It concludes that both works became exemplary partly because they were so unlike any literature before them. Although unconventional, each was familiar enough to be contextualized in the course of literary history, meaning they unique in a way that could be articulated with the terminology available to literary critics of their time.
Paper Undergraduate
Golden Rule of Cross-Cultural Communications
Communicating effectively with others involves some fairly straightforward techniques that are equally valid in any setting rather than the complex multidimensional conceptualizations that are being advanced in the literature today. To gain some fresh insights in this area, this paper provides a review of the relevant peer-reviewed and scholarly literature concerning constraints to cross-cultural communications and how these can be overcome by using some common sense and intuition. A summary of the research and important findings are presented in the paper's conclusion.
Essay Undergraduate
Relation Between Culture and Dream and Use of Those Element in the Art Work
Dreams and artwork are two things that seem to provide an invitation for interpretation, and cultural perspective is almost always going to influence that interpretation. At first blush, this statement may seem to fly…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Wound Healing in Plant Cells
The Current study will attempt to further clarify and utilize Arabidopsis thaliana in studying wound healing in plants as well as the most effective means in studying the process. Root hairs are not essential for plant…