Essay Topic Hub

Modern Life
Essays

531+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Modern life as an academic topic invites students to examine the conditions, pressures, and transformations that define contemporary human experience. It appears across a wide range of disciplines, including sociology, art history, cultural studies, philosophy, and communications. The topic holds academic interest because it sits at the intersection of the personal and the structural, asking how present-day social arrangements, technologies, and cultural forms shape the way people think, feel, and relate to one another. Questions about what it means to live in the current moment — and how that moment differs from the past — give the topic both analytical depth and immediate relevance.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on visual culture and art history, analyzing how modern life is represented through artistic works and movements. Others examine technological change, particularly the evolution of communication technology, as a lens for understanding shifting social realities. Additional essays approach the topic through a sociological or philosophical frame, asking whether individuals are fundamentally shaped by the societies they inhabit. Some papers apply a case-study method, drawing lessons from specific events, while others take a comparative or critical-response form that weighs competing perspectives against one another.

A strong essay on modern life requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of everything contemporary. Evidence drawn from specific examples — a defined technology, a cultural artifact, a documented social trend — carries more weight than generalized claims about how people live. The most common pitfall is treating "modern life" as self-evident; a successful essay defines exactly which aspects of present reality it addresses and explains why those aspects matter analytically.

531 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Media worlds and their cultural significance
Neil Postman, in his book "Amusing Ourselves to Death" discusses how television has altered the medium by which information is transmitted, and the new nature of the medium forces the information being transmitted to be incomplete, un-sequential, lacking the ability to promote intellectual growth, and un-reasoned. Postman's book was originally published in 1985, a time when television was the main medium of information transmittance, however, several decades later the world is once again faced with a new technology that has fundamentally changed the way information is transmitted: the Internet. Much like Postman asserted that television has reduced the intellectual effectiveness of the nature of the information transmitted through television, the Internet, smart phones, pads and pods, and all the other new information technology tools have turned information into even more of a segmented, isolated, non-integrated, bits of trivia that have no relevance to the world in general.
Paper Doctorate
Mandatory an Attitude of \'Firm Persuasion\' Means
This paper uses Tuesdays with Morrie as a springboard to discuss what is a meaningful life. It is written from the perspective of a college student who is still trying to assess his or her place in the world and find his or her life's vocation. The value of taking time off to understand one's self in solitude versus immersing one's self in the busy nature of modern life is discussed.
Research Paper Doctorate
Marketing channels and methods: effectiveness and trends
Marketing Channels and Methods -- the New Svelte Shape of McDonald's
Research Paper Doctorate
Leon's Ecological Warning in Ecology of a Cracker Childhood
Last Five Chapters -- Quotation from "The Kindest Cut"
Research Paper Doctorate
To What Extent Are Individuals the Product of Society
The idea of 'the individual' has become such an accepted construct in modern life it is easy to forget that the idea of an isolated, all-important private and individual 'self' is a relatively new development in human…
Paper Doctorate
Invention by Design, by Henry Petroski, Published
¶ … Invention by Design, by Henry Petroski, published in Cambridge, MA by the Harvard University Press in 1996. Specifically, it will discuss what in the book is relevant to the Mechanical Engineering program, the…
Research Paper High School
Petroleum industry violence and conflict
¶ … Petro-Violence: Community, Extraction and Political Ecology of a Mythic Commodity" makes for an extremely interesting read. The main idea of this article is the legacy of tragedy and violence that surrounds one of…
Research Paper Doctorate
The original affluent society
¶ … Affluent Society," Marshall Sahlins shows that hunter-gatherer societies are by nature affluent because "all the people's material wants were easily satisfied." Their low standard of living, and correspondingly few…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Wealth in American Society Wealth
Wealth is a concept that is subject to different definitions largely base on cultural values and societal beliefs. In certain human societies, wealth is hardly even considered simply because the everyday reality of…
Paper Undergraduate
Specifications and requirements review
In this passage, Eliot invokes the image of Christ (the Son of Man). Eliot paints a picture of modern life where all faith is dead. False idols or images have been shattered, as occurred with incident of the Golden Calf…