Essay Topic Hub

Mexican
Essays

717+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

The topic of Mexican and Mexican American studies appears across a wide range of disciplines, including ethnic studies, history, cultural studies, sociology, and education. Students engage with it to understand the complex identity formations, historical events, and social conditions that have shaped people of Mexican origin both in Mexico and within the United States. The subject carries academic weight because it sits at the intersection of immigration, colonial history, cultural production, and political struggle, making it relevant to courses that examine race, ethnicity, and national identity in the Americas. California and the broader American Southwest serve as particularly significant geographic contexts, given the deep historical and demographic ties to Mexico.

Papers on this topic take a variety of approaches. Some focus on historical analysis, examining events like the Mexican American War and its long-term consequences, or tracing the history of Chicanos in California. Others adopt a literary and cultural lens, analyzing writers such as Gloria Anzaldúa, Richard Rodriguez, and Américo Paredes alongside the communities their work represents. Additional essays address social issues—including gang structures, health disparities like obesity among Mexican American youth, and immigration patterns involving Chinese, Japanese, and Mexican populations—while others explore cultural identity and diversity within Mexican and South American groups more broadly.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a focused thesis that commits to a specific angle, whether historical, cultural, or sociological, rather than attempting to cover Mexican identity as a whole. Evidence drawn from primary historical sources, literary texts, or community-based case studies tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is conflating Mexican national identity with Mexican American experience, which are related but distinct subjects that require careful differentiation throughout the argument.

717 papers
Sort by:
Paper High School
Justice in Civil Disobedience
Henry David Thoreau's essay on "Civil Disobedience" was ostensibly written to defend the author's refusal to pay taxes to support the Mexican-American War. However, upon closer analysis of the essay, Thoreau's nonpayment emerges as more vague and anarchist in nature than a calculated political action. This is despite the fact that the work later inspired so many meaningful movements for political change.
Paper Doctorate
Cocaine in California Cocaine Production
This paper talks about the popularization of cocaine use and how it was not confined to African Americans or simple laborers. In Northern cities, cocaine use increased amongst poorer people – in fact, cocaine was often cheaper than alcohol. This paper discusses the abuse of cocaine and its history in california.
Research Paper Doctorate
Guantanamo Bay detention facility and operations
History of Guantanamo Bay, and the U.S. Involvement with Guantanamo Bay
Paper Undergraduate
Marketing forces and diversification strategies
Marketing Forces and Diversification Diversity and competition among caregivers are driving forces for defining major ethnic target groups in the community, targeting marketing to those groups and tailoring health care to the needs of those groups. An astute and successful example is given in Noonan's and Savolaine's article about a Midwestern community hospital. Aware of the community's increasing diversity and mindful of rigorous competition among health care providers, the community hospital was not content with service area analysis of ethnicities and cultures; rather, the hospital endeavored to garner specific data about the ethnicity of obstetric patients who were discharged and physician's specific information regarding the ethnicities of their patients. Using this data, the hospital defined 4 major ethnic target groups and proceeded to intelligently market to those groups while tailoring the health care experience to those groups. The result was continued quality of care above the national average and increased patient satisfaction, even as the obstetric patient population significantly increased. The intelligence and success of those marketing and health care measures to better attract and serve a diverse community should compel a hospital CEO to incorporate the same approach to better attract and service diverse ethnicities and cultures in his/her own community.
Research Paper Doctorate
Anthony Quinn: life and career overview
Anthony Quinn was often thought of as being larger than life. He was a talented actor who played many diverse roles and is now a Hollywood legend.
Thesis Masters
Violence in Video Games and the Role
The video game industry is a multi-billion dollar industry representing about $9.9 billion dollars in retail sales in the U.S. alone in 2004 (Greitemeyer and Osswald, 2010). In this paper, video games refer to…
Paper Undergraduate
American global hegemony and international influence
To state that there are no fundamental differences between international politics in 1900-45 and afterwards would be to carry the argument to an extreme, even though the continuities are greater than the discontinuities. Above all else, the liberal, democratic states and empires in the U.S. and Western Europe were highly interventionist and aggressive in the developing world and Global South long before World War II, and this did not change in the Cold War and post-Cold War eras. Even governments that were democratically elected were sometimes overthrown and replaced by more pliable regimes, such as the ‘friendly' dictators of Central America and the Caribbean. At the same time, though, there has also been far more harmony and cooperation between the Great Powers since 1945 than in the previous fifty years, especially through NATO and the European Union. America's alliance with Japan, Britain, France and Germany has survived various stresses and strains over the decades, and even the collapse of the Soviet Union, and this requires an explanation. None of the imperial powers has fought a major war since the invention of nuclear weapons, even though they have intervened frequently against the non-nuclear states of the developing world. Perhaps this alliance is explained by political and ideological affinities, as liberals maintain, or by cultural affinities as opposed to Muslim and Orthodox civilizations, as Samuel Huntington explains—although admittedly Japan is left as quite an outlier here.
Research Paper Doctorate
Mexican immigrants and their socioeconomic impact
Economic Problems Faced by Mexican Immigrants
Research Paper Doctorate
Anthropology concepts and applications
Anthropology: An Analysis of Two Articles
Paper Doctorate
Historiographical Debate Into the Effects of Santa Anna\'s Reign in Mexico
In his self-described revisionist biography Santa Anna of Mexico (2007), Will Fowler has courageously taken up the defense of the Mexico caudillo, fully aware that he is all but universally reviled in the historiography of the United States and Mexico. From the beginning, he made his intention clear to vindicate the reputation of a dictator whose "vilification has been so thorough and effective that the process of deconstructing the numerous lies that have been told and retold" is almost impossible. He is the tyrant that "all Mexicans (and Texans) love to hate", blamed for losing the Mexican War for a "fistful of dollars" and selling another large part of it for personal gain with the Gadsden Purchase in 1853. Timothy J. Henderson asserted that "Mexicans ever since have blamed him for many, if not most, of the misfortunes their country suffered." He had a great talent for exploiting and manipulating political divisions but none for governing a country. In U.S. history and popular culture, he has always been portrayed as a corrupt megalomaniac, the ‘Napoleon of the West', responsible for the massacres at the Alamo and Goliad. As John Chasteen and James Wood put it, even his autobiography was an "extraordinary work of self-dramatization" by a dictator who put on a show of being a "vulnerable, introspective protagonist" but was in reality a power-hungry tyrant with "unmitigated vanity" and "obvious self-absorption."