Essay Topic Hub

Legacy
Essays

1,879+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,879 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Legacy refers to what individuals, institutions, cultures, and civilizations leave behind — the lasting impact of their actions, creations, and ideas on future generations. It appears across disciplines including history, political science, literature, music, architecture, and education, making it a genuinely cross-curricular subject. Students engage with it because it asks a fundamental question: how do the choices made in one era shape society today? The topic invites analysis of figures and institutions as varied as Roman civilization, Aristotle's philosophy of education, the Negro Baseball League, and architect I. M. Pei, grounding abstract ideas about influence in concrete historical and cultural cases.

The papers collected here approach legacy from several distinct angles. Historical analyses trace how past events and institutions — such as the Nineteenth Century's influence on the Great War or the enduring structures of Roman civilization — continue to resonate in contemporary life. Other essays take a biographical or cultural focus, examining how figures like John Coltrane or Sundiata shaped music and storytelling traditions. Some papers use case studies of specific organizations, such as the Girl Scouts or Smith and Wesson, to explore how institutional identity evolves over time. Reflective and policy-oriented approaches also appear, connecting personal development to broader historical and social legacies.

A strong essay on legacy stakes out a clear, arguable claim about why a particular inheritance matters and to whom. Evidence drawn from historical context, cultural impact, or documented outcomes carries the most weight. Writers should resist simply cataloguing achievements; instead, the analysis should explain the mechanisms by which influence transfers across time. The most common pitfall is treating legacy as uniformly positive — the strongest essays acknowledge tension, unintended consequences, or contested interpretations.

1,879 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
International Style Architecture: Origins, Principles, and Legacy
¶ … International style of architecture was a major style that emerged, and rose in popularity, in the 1920s and 1930s. The term "International Style" stems from the name of a book by Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip…
Essay Doctorate
President: 1. The President\'s Opening the President\'s
¶ … President: 1. The President's opening
Research Paper Doctorate
Learning organizations: theory, characteristics, and implementation
The characteristics of learning organizations that set them apart from the many other types is the ability to continually stay agile in structure and process, continue to find new approaches to fostering passionate…
Paper Undergraduate
Cultural Review Film and Culture the Grimm
The Grimm brothers began collecting folktales around 1807 and began a legacy that has been ingrained in popular culture. Although the tales that they collected were representative of the culture at the time, the brothers worked to canonize some of the archetypes that were present in their day. Instead of seeing them as just random works of literature, the brothers were able to identify various themes which served as the main focuses on their fairy and folk tale. These themes seemed to be generally available in the stories that the two individuals documented just as they are also present today. These archetypical characters which formed can make one wonder whether it is the culture that shapes the story or whether it is the stories that shape the culture.
Paper Undergraduate
Contemporary Irish Literature
This paper compares two modern Irish poems. "Belfast Confetti" and "The Ulster Way" are not traditional poems. They do not rhyme and they do not have a definitive meter. Yet, each tells a unique narrative wherein the narrator has to deal both with the national identity of Ireland and the difficulty of individualism in such a culture.
Thesis Doctorate
Miles Davis or John Coltrane Select One on the Development of Modern Jazz
This is a five page paper about jazz, and about the influence of Miles Davis on modern jazz in particular. This paper uses credible sources only, a few of which happen to be on the internet. The paper is divided into several sections, starting with an introduction, and ending with a conclusion. In between are several sections about Miles Davis music and the impact his music had on other musicians, too.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Party Machines and Immigration
This paper provides a discussion concerning some of the main actors involved in party machines and immigration in the United States during the 20th century, including Frank Hague, William "Boss" Tweed, Abraham Reuf, George Cox, Richard Daley and Vito Lopez to determine the impact of these individuals on modern American politics in general and on immigrants in particular. Finally, a summary of the research and important findings concerning these issues are presented in the conclusion.
Research Paper Doctorate
American rebels and the revolution of 1776
¶ … prompting Americans to rebel in 1776: Parliamentary taxation, restriction of civil liberties, British military measures, and the legacy of colonial religious and political ideas.
Research Paper Doctorate
Bell Hooks the Scholar Bell
The scholar bell hooks Killing Rage: Ending Racism begins with the shocking defense of a severely psychologically disturbed black man who unleashed a killing spree on the New York subway.
Paper Undergraduate
Leonardo da Vinci: life, art, and scientific innovations
This paper compares four different articles about Leonardo da Vinci. Comparisons range from their theses, to their approach of the subject. Post comparison deals with which author would I want to meet, as well as which of da Vinci's works of art would I want to see the most. The conclusion talks about what other questions could be asked or answered about da Vinci.