Essay Topic Hub

Marxist Theory
Essays

79+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Marxist theory is a framework for analyzing society, history, and economics through the lens of class struggle, material conditions, and the dynamics of power between those who own the means of production and those who labor for them. It appears across a wide range of disciplines, including sociology, political science, economics, history, and literary studies. Students are drawn to it because it offers a systematic critique of capitalism and a method for explaining inequality, conflict, and social change that cuts across multiple fields of inquiry.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely broad range of approaches. Some take a historical or economic angle, tracing the development of economic thought and situating Marxist ideas within broader intellectual traditions. Others apply conflict theory to institutional settings such as schools, examining empowerment and disempowerment in education. Still others extend Marxist analysis into cultural and literary territory, exploring geographic imagination in American literature, racial ideology, and shifting cultural values over time. Applied analyses also appear, with students using the framework to examine everyday objects, labor, deskilling, and the prison system.

A strong essay on Marxist theory begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad summary of Marx's ideas. The most persuasive papers select a specific institution, text, or social phenomenon and demonstrate concretely how Marxist concepts — such as class, ideology, or alienation — illuminate something that other frameworks might miss. Evidence drawn from primary historical or sociological sources carries more weight than vague generalization. The most common pitfall is treating the theory as self-evidently correct rather than engaging critically with its assumptions and limitations.

Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Jealousy as an Adverse Emotion
Jealousy as an adverse emotion is a term which commonly refers to inner psychological and outer sociological conflict pertaining to an object that one covets or desires. Jealously usually refers to a dynamic that occurs…
Paper Doctorate
Taylorism There Are a Number
There are a number of different modern social theories regarding the nature of society, social change, human's place within society and the idea of how integration and alienation fit within a modern society.
Paper Doctorate
Anatoly Gladilin\'s Moscow Racetrack Is a Powerful
Anatoly Gladilin's Moscow Racetrack is a powerful melange of satire, intrigue, and political commentary. Gladilin paints poignant portraits of the characters that populate the Moscow track, lending insight into gambling…
Paper Masters
Hegemony in General Marxists Tend to Focus
Hegemony refers to the domination of one class in a society over other classes. The current paper discusses how hegemony is achieved via the use of a powerful media that is able to indoctrinate working classes into the ideology of the ruling classes. This perspective is approached from a Marxist position but also discusses softer perspectives.
Research Paper Doctorate
Habermas an Alternative to Marxist
Habermas continues in the tradition of Kant and the Enlightenment by forming a theory of rationality as found in interpersonal linguistic communication, instead of in the cosmos or the knowing subject.
Research Paper Doctorate
Marxist Anthropology and American Materialism
¶ … Marxist Anthropology and American Materialism in the Science of Anthropology
Research Paper Doctorate
Current Sociological Issue Using an Explicitly Marxist Perspective
The economic crisis that hit the international community and the world economies has determined, since 2008, a slow, almost invisible shift in the doctrinal preferences of more and more people in terms of deciding on the right economic approach to be followed in order to avoid such crises from taking place in the future.
Research Paper Doctorate
see box below
Poverty and the eternal struggle of the working class is a concept that has been debated for centuries. The reasons given for the existence of poverty have ranged through the years from the result of a character flaw in…
Essay Doctorate
Analysis of chapters 4 and 5 from a psychology perspective
This is a five page paper. It is a five page paper that analyzes two chapters of a book. The book is by Jerome Bruner and is called Actual Minds, Possible Worlds. The chapters used for analysis are only chapters 4 (The Transactional Self) and Chapter 5 (about Vygotsky). The topic is psychology, but the book discusses consciousness from a philosophical and linguistic perspective too.
Paper Masters
East Asian Civilizations: Unequal Treaties to Civil War
PART I: (1) UNEQUAL TREATIES The growing demand for Chinese tea, silk and ceramics by British had created severe trade imbalance for Britain. The British were also losing their silver reserves in exchange for Chinese goods. In late 1930's government of Great Britain found "opium" as a solution for resolving trade imbalance. Opium, which is more addictive than tea, was being supplied to China by British merchants. As demand for opium increased in China, Britain's imports increased and in this way silver bullion was flowing out of the China into Britain.