Essay Topic Hub

History
Essays

21,889+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

21,889 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
What is History?

When you hear word “history,” you probably think of the last history class you took. If it was a high school history survey class, then you may think in broad terms of global history or in narrower terms and think of an American history survey course. Whatever image comes to mind, you probably think of a fairly broad topic that describes past events. History may seem dead, dry, or boring to you because it focuses on past events and past people and sometimes seems to have little modern-day relevance. However, history is much more than a study of the past. By studying the past, you can make connections to modern day events. In fact, in some ways, studying the past helps you predict the future.

For students in American high schools, colleges, and universities, American history is a pretty standard subject. While the details of American history are so rich that they can be studied in specialized courses like African American history or the history of women’s health, most students will begin with a broad overview of American history. In fact, this overview is what is tested on the AP American history test. Students wishing to be successful on that exam, or in any survey course of American history, need to be familiar with basics like: the European discovery of the New World; settlement of the New World by English, Spanish and French explorers; the role that religion played in settlement and colonization; the New England Colonies; the Middle, Chesapeake and Southern Colonies; the French and Indian War; the American Revolution; the writing of the Constitution and the development of the modern U.S. political system; the War of 1812; the rise of cotton in the South and the role slavery played in the development as cotton as the major industry of the South; the concept of Manifest Destiny; the removal of Native Americans/ Indians from their historic lands; the Civil War; the abolition of slavery; Reconstruction; the end of Reconstruction; the Trail of Tears; the role of the United States in World War I and World War II; the Industrial Revolution; Black Friday; the Great Depression; the Dust Bowl; the Korean War; the Vietnam War; the 1960s Civil Rights Movement; and the Cold War. In depth courses could focus on any one of those topics or even a sub-topic within those topics and describe the history in greater detail.

World history will focus on different issues, including an examination of how the major world religions influenced events in history and helped shape the modern world. While these big events and major themes help describe how history was shaped, they do not tell the whole story. In fact, what history buffs love about history is that virtually every topic can be explored in greater detail. If you need more information about the role that specific groups played in a historical event, how events impacted different people and places, or the interaction between different events in history, we can provide custom research that helps illuminate those hidden parts of history. [ Show Less ]

 

21,889 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Writing as Process in Undergraduate History: A Reflective Review
Implementing Assessment and Improving Undergraduate Writing: One Department's Experience:
Essay Doctorate
Women in Leadership Roles in the U.S. Military: A History
Since the revolutionary periods of the war, women took center stage positions in leadership roles. In periods of the Mexican, Civil and revolutionary wars, remarkably few women got involved in combat. The creation of such reserves was for the allowance of men to concentrate in fighting overseas. The Women Air Force Service Pilots (WASPS) was created by the Air Force so there could be enough personnel to fly within the states men flew overseas. Effective leadership requires skills relevant to the set objectives. The movement into leadership positions requires the combination of these skills in a manner, which helps in seeing the company objectives arrived at in the most effective and efficient manner.
Paper Masters
Nurse Practitioner Specialty Certifications and Education
Each and every nurse who goes on to become a nurse practitioner has to go through a high degree of schooling and is required to take tests for licensure. That is the only way to be sure an NP is prepared to do the job and to protect the health and safety of the patients. Discussed here are some of the different NP specialties and why they are so important today, along with schools that offer them.
Research Paper Doctorate
Huston's Bible vs. DeMille's Ten Commandments: Film Analysis
Before discussing the central aspects of this section it is interesting to refer to the views of Huston on religion; which may throw light on his interpretation of the Biblical text.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The Changing Face of Nursing: Roles, Education & Diversity
Nurse has traditionally been a person who is in charge of taking care of a sick person who needs her services in order to get better and get back on the road to recovery. Through the years, there have been examples of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Gender, Desire, and Identity in Being John Malkovich
Sexuality must not be thought of as a kind of a natural given power which tries to hold in check, or as an obscure domain which knowledge tries gradually to uncover. It is the name that can be given to a historical…
Paper Undergraduate
US Economic Crisis, Healthcare Reform, and Unemployment
¶ … nation state still relevant in shaping national labour markets?
Essay Doctorate
Spices, Colonialism, and the Rise of Global Trade
¶ … Bernstein's book, a Splendid Exchange:How trade shaped world" retitled switch exotic spices
Paper Doctorate
Slavery, Disease, and Mercantilism in Colonial America
Colonial America – Issues and Answers Questions ONE & TWO: Did race determine whom the colonists, would enslave, or was it coincidental that the majority of the enslaved population would be a certain group? Contrast the slavery issues in Chesapeake with the slavery in South Carolina and Georgia. In the book Slavery in Colonial America, 1619-1776, author Betty Wood delves deeply into the dynamics of the work that needed to be done in Virginia – and who would do that work – beginning in Roanoke in the 1580s (but that community vanished, never to be heard from). Meanwhile, before British settlers left Europe for the New World it was known that Spanish galleons "laden down with gold and other precious metals" were making their way back to Europe from the Americas. Hence, the desire for other Europeans to settle the Americas and find some of that gold and silver was great. The English wanted to emulate the Spaniards, and so in 1606 they established the Virginia Company, thinking that this would be a money making project. Initially the blueprint for the Virginia Company did not involve enslaving any humans to get the work done. The Spaniards and Portuguese had used "racially based systems of slavery that involved large numbers of" African slaves and Native American slaves to carve out profitable colonies in Latin America and the Caribbean, but the British didn't think they needed to enslave people.
Essay Doctorate
Iroquois Resistance and French Colonial Hegemony in Canada
As Bothwell points out, Canada's Native peoples have always been and are still a crucial component in any analysis of the relations between English and French," providing a lens by which to view the entirety of Canadian…