Essay Topic Hub

Journalistic
Essays

42+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

42 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Journalistic essays sit at the intersection of reporting, argumentation, and literary craft, making them a common assignment across English composition, media studies, and communications courses. The form demands that writers combine factual accuracy with a clear, persuasive voice, and it has historically served as a vehicle for social criticism, cultural commentary, and political analysis. Because journalistic writing spans book reviews, documentary criticism, investigative reporting, and personal essays, it gives students a flexible framework for engaging with real-world subjects while developing disciplined prose style.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a notably wide range of subjects and methods. Some take a literary-analytical approach, examining works by figures such as Walt Whitman and Joyce Carol Oates or texts like John Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath. Others pursue media criticism, looking at film — including Good Night and Good Luck and early Dracula films — or platforms like YouTube. Still others engage with political and historical subjects, from the future of Cuba to human rights activism, while a few focus directly on journalism itself, exploring the Pulitzer Prize's influence on the profession or the documentary traditions associated with John Grierson.

A strong journalistic essay requires a thesis that makes a specific, defensible claim rather than simply summarizing its subject. Evidence drawn from primary sources — the text, film, or event under examination — carries the most weight, supported where appropriate by cultural or historical context. The most common pitfall is drifting between journalistic reporting and academic analysis without committing fully to either; the strongest essays maintain a consistent argumentative purpose from the opening paragraph to the conclusion.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Counting the Dead the Work
The work Counting the Dead: The Culture and Politics of Human Rights Activism in Columbia by Winifred Tate, offers the reader a core sense of the cultural, political divergence of ideologies of Human Rights and stresses…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Clonning benefit
Possible Negative Consequences and their Consequences.
Essay Doctorate
Professional development seminar for higher education curriculum renewal
The paper topic primarily revolves around the details of the professional development seminar. The paper thus focuses on curriculum development and design by higher education leaders for a clearer understanding and implementation amongst the faculty and staff members. Hence, the paper primarily focuses on designing the topics that need to be covered in the seminar.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Frederick Douglas the Debate About
The debate about paternalism and slavery in the U.S. stems back to the early 1800s. Some individuals have strongly believed that slavery was in the "best interests" of the slaves and that slaves saw their masters in a…
Research Paper Doctorate
Joyce Carol Oates: A Stylistic
Joyce Carol Oates: A Stylistic Move from the Journalistic to the Literary
Research Paper Doctorate
City in Modern Literature Professor
Professor and author Richard Sennett is frequently depicted in biographies and scholarly journals as a left-leaning social science thinker whose writing, though sometimes brilliant and always original, is also on…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Russian Literature Four Months Ago,
Four months ago, on a Friday evening, Gedali the junk dealer took me to your father, Rabbi Motale, but back then, Bratslavsky [...] and I, who can barely harness the storms of fantasy raging through my ancient body, I…
Essay Masters
Sinclair Novel the Jungle
Upton Sinclair's novel The Jungle is famous for its account of the Chicago meatpacking industry, but it is equally valuable as an example of naturalistic social justice. Sinclair uses naturalist description in order convey a sense of realism, and that realism aids him in his ideological project. The eventual turn towards socialism makes sense in the context of Sinclair's narration, because socialism appears to be the only answer to the exploitation and injustice created by capitalism in the novel.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Journalistic Dialogue. The Event Used
¶ … journalistic dialogue. The event used to complete this paper is a tornado that ripped through Gallatin, TN and made national news for its damage and devastation including the deaths of 12 residents.
Essay Doctorate
Enterprise response to ubiquitous information access and real-time communications
Explain how each of the five evaluation factors for a secondary source influences its management decision- making value.