Essay Topic Hub

Naturalism
Essays

189+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Naturalism is a literary and artistic movement that emerged from realism, pushing further toward the idea that human lives are shaped by environment, heredity, and social forces beyond individual control. It appears most often in American and European literature courses, where students examine how writers responded to industrialization, poverty, and scientific determinism. The movement invites close attention to questions about free will, class, and survival, making it a rich subject for both historical and theoretical analysis. Works like Stephen Crane's The Red Badge of Courage, Kate Chopin's The Awakening, and John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath appear frequently as primary texts, alongside broader comparisons between realism, naturalism, regionalism, and modernism.

Student essays on this topic take several recognizable approaches. Comparative analysis is common, placing naturalism alongside realism and symbolism through writers such as Flaubert and Dostoyevsky to trace how each movement constructs reality differently. Some papers focus on a single text, using Crane or Steinbeck to ground arguments about determinism and class struggle. Others explore local color and regionalism through works like Garland's Up the Coulee and Frederic's The Damnation of Theron Ware, examining how place shapes character. A smaller number extend into visual art and drama, treating naturalism as a cross-medium aesthetic.

A strong essay on naturalism needs a focused thesis that goes beyond labeling a text naturalistic and instead argues what the movement's conventions reveal about a specific theme or character situation. Evidence drawn from narrative technique, imagery of nature and environment, and social context carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating realism and naturalism without distinguishing their different assumptions about human agency and determinism.

Sort by:
Paper High School
Portraiture: Van Eyck, Van Der
The art of 15th century artists Jan van Eyck, Rogier van der Weyden and Jean Fouquet and their portraiture has been recognized as some of the most prolific art of its day, and has served to influence modern day art and artists as well. The following will serve to provide a comparative analysis of their most notable work and demonstrate the way these pieces and the artists themselves inform contemporary art.
Paper High School
Dr. Neil T. Anderson\'s Book,
¶ … Dr. Neil T. Anderson's book, Discipleship Counseling. In this book, the author explores the role of spiritual counseling in a secular world as well as the role of secular psychological treatment in spiritual health…
Essay Doctorate
The hero-saint concept in Romantic and Enlightenment thought: philosophical development from Francis to Kierkegaard
This paper analyzes the evolution of the concept of the hero and the saint from the time of St. Francis and Dante on through to Michelangelo, the Enlightenment and Romantic Age to Kierkegaard and his depiction of Abraham. It shows an evolution in the concept of heroism and sanctity away from God as viewed by the Church to Man as viewed through a liberal lens.
Paper Masters
Comparison of Bugiardini's Madonna and Child with Saint John and van der Weyden's Deposition
There are many artistic contrasting elements and differences between Giuliano Bugiardini's Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist, and Roger van der Wyden's Deposition. Even an initial cursory glance at the two…
Paper Masters
Twentieth Century Genres in American
Twentieth Century Genres in American Literature: From Naturalism to Post-Modernism in Under Sixty Years
Essay Doctorate
Christian worldview and biblical references
Imagine studying the Bible and all that is has to offer. How does the Bible relate to this aspect? How does one's perspective change after studying God's Word? What statistics are involved?
Essay Doctorate
Artistic Styles in the Emerging Modern World
Although one is a sculpture and the other a painting, what differences do you see in the representation of the human figure between Michelangelo's work and the altarpiece?
Paper Masters
Cimabue and Giotto a Comparison
This paper compares and contrasts two paintings by Cimabue and Giotto. Though the subjects are similar (the enthronement of the Madonna), the styles and effects are different. Cimabue tends to reflect the traditional Byzantine school, while Giotto moves toward a new school of expression known as realism and naturalism.
Paper Undergraduate
Faustus and Everyman an Analysis
An Analysis of Resemblance: Faustus and Everyman
Research Paper Undergraduate
Photography in Art the First
The first thing that the mind conjures is the meaning of art. Art can be defined as any human creativity, skill, any craft or profession or its ideals, an assemblage of things having form and beauty within any…