Essay Topic Hub

Holocaust
Essays

612+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

The Holocaust stands as one of the most studied events in modern history, examined across disciplines including history, political science, literature, and ethics. The systematic persecution and murder of Jews and others by the Nazi regime raises profound questions about ideology, power, obedience, and collective responsibility. Its academic weight comes from the intersection of documentary evidence, survivor testimony, and ongoing debates about how such atrocities become possible within organized societies. Works by figures such as Hannah Arendt, whose analysis of Adolf Eichmann examines the mechanics of perpetration, and writers like Tadeusz Borowski and poet Paul Celan, whose work Todesfuge confronts the experience of death camps through literature, give the topic a rich range of primary and analytical sources.

Student papers on this topic approach it from several directions. Some focus on the lived experience inside concentration camps and the conditions forced upon prisoners. Others examine institutional structures like the Hitler Youth as mechanisms of ideological formation. Historical and regional analyses explore the aftermath of the Holocaust and its effects on Central Europe, while psychologically oriented essays trace transgenerational trauma. A recurring concern across papers is Jewish resistance, pushing back against narratives of passivity, alongside arguments for why remembrance and historical lessons remain vital today.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused thesis rather than a broad survey of events. Evidence drawn from historical records, literary texts, or documented testimony carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the Holocaust as a single uniform experience rather than acknowledging the distinct perspectives of perpetrators, victims, bystanders, and survivors, each of which demands careful, evidence-based analysis.

612 papers
Sort by:
Paper Masters
I need more information to create a meaningful title
This paper looks at the attributes of The Diary of Anne Frank and examines the elements that make this tale so endearing and enduring. Anne's ability to sustain her optimism and see people as essentially good in the face of the terrible persecution and prejudice of the Holocaust is discussed.
Research Paper Doctorate
History of the Holocaust
Nazi Policy, Jewish Workers, German Killers
Paper Undergraduate
Memory studies: theories, methods, and contemporary applications
The Turkish treatment of the Armenian Genocide, an event acknowledged nearly all over the world outside of Turkey and its closest allies, is representative of how nationalistic attitudes rewrite actual historical events in favor of a ruling party. It is easy to criticize the Turks in this matter, but in actuality the Turkish attitude towards the Armenian question calls for a critical eye in every country regarding its presentation of international events and the need for objectivity in understanding truth.
Research Paper Doctorate
Bury Me Standing by Fonseca
Bury Me Standing - Isabel Fonseca's History of Roma Gypsies
Research Paper Doctorate
All but My Life
¶ … Life" by Gerda Weissmann Klein. In this book Gerda has narrated her ordeal during the Nazis regime and how she survived the holocaust and the death march. It is a highly emotional book, which narrates the horrors…
Research Paper Doctorate
Public Policy on People With AIDS
Public AIDS Policy -- And the Band Played on, for Republicans and Democrats alike, during this public health crisis of the 1980's
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare's major tragedies and their themes
Or, the dynamic forms of catharsis and tragic flaws in Shakespeare's plays
Paper Undergraduate
Framing Testimony
Dominick LaCapra's essay "Here There Is No Why" takes its title from the answer that an S.S. at Auschwitz gave to Promo Levi when he dared to ask the "Why?" question. To be sure, the guard was simply attempting to be cynical and sarcastic rather than reflective or philosophical, but LaCapra is also critical of Claude Lanzmann for failing to ask this question enough in Shoah. All of the Germans who Lanzmann interviewed were either perpetrators of complicit bystanders, and they spent a great deal of time explaining what, where and how the Holocaust happened, while also denying or minimizing their own responsibility. Franz Suchomel, the S.S. guard at Treblinka, was a notable exception to this rule, but Lanzmann interviewed him with a hidden camera after promising to keep his identity anonymous. Almost all of the Jewish survivors described what happened in painful detail, and Lanzmann's preference was to make them literally relive their experiences, but they were not asked why.
Research Paper Doctorate
R.R. Tolkien: The Lord of the Rings
The Lord of the Rings forms a significant part of the substantial canon of works written by the English author and academic J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973) set in his invented world of Middle Earth.
Research Paper Doctorate
Charlemagne by Roger Collins
Roger Collins's 1998 biography of Charlemagne is both highly informative in terms of helping to understand the historical and political context in which Charlemagne came to power as well as - although this is true to a…