Essay Topic Hub

Hunting
Essays

729+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Hunting as an academic subject extends well beyond sport and recreation, drawing attention from courses in environmental studies, anthropology, literature, history, and film analysis. It raises questions about human relationships with animals, ecological responsibility, and cultural identity that make it genuinely complex to analyze. The topic appears across discussions of prehistoric life, indigenous practices, and contemporary policy debates, giving it unusual range as a subject for academic writing.

Student papers on this topic approach hunting from strikingly varied angles. Literary analysis is common, with works such as The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling and Lord of the Flies examined for what pursuit, predation, and survival reveal about human behavior and group dynamics. Film analysis also features prominently, including close readings of Good Will Hunting that assess performances, emotional impact, and moral significance. Other papers take anthropological or historical approaches, exploring hunting practices among Native Americans, the Mbuti, and the Basseri of Iran, or examining subsistence strategies during the Low Paleolithic Age. Argumentative essays address conservation concerns such as the status of endangered cougars, while case studies apply behavioral theories to real or fictional scenarios.

A strong essay on hunting identifies a specific, debatable claim early — whether the focus is ecological, cultural, literary, or ethical — and avoids treating the subject as self-evidently good or harmful without evidence. Historical and ethnographic sources carry particular weight when writing about indigenous or prehistoric contexts, while policy arguments benefit from concrete ecological data. The most common pitfall is scope creep: hunting touches so many disciplines that papers risk losing focus, so anchoring the thesis to one clear lens — literary, anthropological, or environmental — keeps the argument coherent.

729 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Inductive and deductive reasoning in Richard Connell's "The Most Dangerous Game
In order to better understand The Most Dangerous Game by Richard Connell, one needs to consider Connell's use of both deductive and inductive reasoning. Those will be addressed here in order to ensure that they are clearly defined, which will allow the reader to formulate an opinion of Connell and his work. Understanding the different types of reasoning can also be expanded to other works of literature.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Bush Administration, the IRI, and the Fall of Aristide
¶ … Bush Administration, the IRI and the Destabilization of Aristide
Research Paper Doctorate
Conditions leading to development of early Mesopotamian and Egyptian civilizations
One of the major events that marked the beginning of civilization was the development of agriculture which was made possible by the presence of three important rivers -- the Tigris and Euphrates in Mesopotamia, the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Mountain Home AR 72653
Mountain Home, Arkansas, Mountain Paradise
Paper Doctorate
Ernest Hemingway the Author Ernest Hemingway Specialized
This paper discusses four short stories of Ernest Hemingway. He wrote what is called naturalistic stories wherein there is little narrator involvement. Instead, the stories are told largely in dialogue and the reader has to look between the lines in order to understand what is really going on in the stories of Hemingway.
Essay Masters
Native Americans: history, culture, and contemporary issues
US history is rich of significant events, which still shape the current society. This study focuses of the people of Dakota and Lakota as members of the native Great Plains. The historical and cultural background is succinctly elucidates and how it played a critical role in how they viewed things like the Ghost dance. During their interaction with the colonialists and European settlers, the opinions of the native tribes changed significantly as shown in this study.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Evolution and Revolution Comparative History of Social Change
In understanding the evolution of human societies in the course of history, it is best traced and determined through the different states of economic development that humanity has experienced.
Paper Doctorate
Male masculinity in Twilight film adaptations
In his chapter on "Modern Masculinities" Cooper Thompson defines masculinity by a number of traits, including independence, pride, resilience, self-control, physical strength, competitive, tough, aggressive, and powerful.
Essay Doctorate
Lipton Tea Can Do That Term Marketing
Term Marketing Project on Lipton Iced Tea
Research Paper Doctorate
Ku Klux Klan: Domestic Terrorists
With the events of recent years Americans have focused their attentions and concerns for violence overseas. It is very easy in the face of post-9/11 society to forget that there are organizations that are extremely…