Essay Topic Hub

Mystery
Essays

1,430+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,430 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Mystery as an academic topic spans a surprisingly wide range of disciplines, from literature and psychology to history and economics. Students engage with it not as a genre label alone but as a conceptual lens — examining the unknown, the unexplained, and the ambiguous in human experience. Courses in literary analysis, social sciences, and history all invite writers to grapple with what resists easy understanding, whether that means the nature of individual behavior, hidden institutional forces, or unresolved events. The appeal lies in how mystery functions as both subject matter and method: the act of investigating something uncertain mirrors the analytical process itself.

The papers gathered here reflect a striking variety of approaches. Some take a literary direction, analyzing works like Bless Me Ultima and Bartleby the Scrivener for their layered, ambiguous meanings. Others pursue historical investigation, exploring figures and organizations such as Jimmy Hoffa and the Knights Templar where facts remain disputed or incomplete. Still others apply case-study and analytical frameworks to subjects like venture capital evaluation, child psychology, and the Vietnam War, treating complexity and uncertainty as problems to be systematically worked through rather than avoided.

A strong essay on mystery benefits from a focused thesis that commits to a specific claim about what is unknown and why it matters, rather than simply cataloguing unanswered questions. Evidence drawn from primary sources, peer-reviewed research, or closely read texts carries the most weight. The common pitfall to avoid is treating ambiguity as a conclusion — uncertainty should drive inquiry, not replace it.

1,430 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Rousseau\'s Confessions and Keats\' Ode on Melancholy
Loneliness and Suffering: Romanticism in "Ode on Melancholy" by John Keats and "Confessions" by Jean Jacques Rousseau
Essay Doctorate
Architect: A Son\'s Journey Could Easily Be
¶ … Architect: A Son's Journey could easily be viewed as a solipsistic documentary. The filmmaker deliberately titles the film as My Architect, with a subtitle A Son's Journey as a way of signaling the viewer that this…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Oedipus the King Rewritten as a Modern Corporate Drama
¶ … Oedipus the King by Sophocles. Specifically it will rewrite the story in dramatic form.
Paper Undergraduate
Solitude the Theme of Religion
The words 'solitude' and 'solitary' appear frequently throughout this novel. Both words are often associated with religion and religious experiences. For instance, in the Christian faith, Jesus spends forty days and…
Essay Doctorate
Breast Cancer Has Been Controlled Across Many
¶ … Breast cancer has been controlled across many different variables, but it has rarely been researched specifically across socioeconomic status. The main focus is whether there is a higher incidence of breast cancer…
Research Paper Doctorate
Fantasy Themes in the Princess
Fantasy Themes in the Princess Bride and Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Paper Undergraduate
Transforming Oneself in the Great
¶ … Transforming Oneself in the Great Gatsby and the Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man
Research Paper Undergraduate
Turning Point in the Life
John Grisham is an extremely popular author in the modern legal and criminal mystery fiction genre. His books and films have been translated into thirty - one languages and they have earned a gross amount of several…
Paper Undergraduate
Edgar Allan Poe: life, works, and literary legacy
Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston on 19 January 19 in 1809. Poe's mother died when he was still an infant and Poe found himself separated from his brother and sister when he went to live with John and Frances Allan.
Thesis Undergraduate
Common Theme Found in Three Stories
Comparing "A Good Man is Hard to Find," "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?" and "The Cask of Amontillado" helps to reveal the way in which the relationships between killers and their victims have been framed in society. Each story presents a different image of the killer, but they work in conjunction to demonstrate how killers are produced by society and endowed with the power to control their victims. Taken together, they show how killers are not monsters, but rather natural products of a flawed society.