Essay Topic Hub

Persuasion
Essays

698+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Persuasion is the study of how individuals and institutions influence beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors through communication. It appears across disciplines including English literature, communication studies, psychology, and business, making it one of the most cross-curricular topics in academic writing. In literary contexts, Jane Austen's novel Persuasion serves as a central text, inviting analysis of social influence, gender, and personal agency in Regency-era England. In social science and communication courses, persuasion is examined as a psychological and rhetorical phenomenon, with frameworks such as the Elaboration Likelihood Model providing structured ways to understand how audiences process arguments and change their minds.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Literary analysis papers examine Austen's Persuasion through feminist and cultural lenses, exploring how characters navigate social pressure and personal conviction. Other papers focus on applied persuasion, analyzing real-world cases such as same-sex marriage debates, homeschooling advocacy, or intercultural management contexts where undesirable influence tactics come into play. Media analysis and communication-focused essays examine how persuasive messaging functions across different channels and audiences, while leadership papers consider the role of influence in organizational settings.

A strong essay on persuasion requires a clearly scoped thesis that identifies a specific mechanism, context, or text rather than treating persuasion as a general concept. Evidence drawn from rhetorical analysis, psychological models, or close reading of a primary text carries the most weight, depending on the disciplinary angle. The most common pitfall is conflating persuasion with manipulation without distinguishing the ethical and strategic differences between the two, a distinction that strengthens any argument considerably.

698 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Kuwait the General Belief Everywhere
The general belief everywhere in the world is that the U.S. Foreign Policy or, as it is otherwise known, the 'country-by-country policy', is one that proves to be of great advantage to that country that it is supposed…
Paper Doctorate
Michael Kimmel\'s \"Transforming a Rape
¶ … Michael Kimmel's "Transforming a Rape Culture," Kimmel cites Brannon's four rules of masculinity. Define at least three of these rules and explain how this construction of masculinity contributes to rape culture.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Evaluation of webquest effectiveness and implementation
Chiang, Judy. "The American Revolution: Was it worth it?" 19 Oct 2007. http://questgarden.com/47/76/3/070311160651/
Paper Doctorate
Servant leadership theories and principles
There are several leadership theories that address this issue from different points of view. There are theories that refer to leadership skills as innate. In accordance with such theories, leaders are born, not made. These theories of leadership usually refer to the military activities. Trait theories on leadership also promote the idea that leaders have inherited skills, and that it is difficult to learn to become a leader. In the case of contingency theories, the factors of the environment significantly influence the behavior of leaders. Therefore, in such cases leaders modify their behavior in accordance with the requirements of the environment.
Research Paper Doctorate
Western Perceptions of the \"Other\"
In her work Raw Histories: Photographs, Anthropology and Museums, Margaret Edwards outlines the most cogent and problematic issue surrounding the use of photography as a means of understanding cultural and social…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Business Persuasion Memo: Addressing Project Strive Concerns
Thanks you so much for taking time yesterday to give me a call and discuss of Project Strive with me. I was not expecting to hear the concerns you have regarding this project, and I was hoping I could clarify a few…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Negotiation strategies in conflict resolution
When a conflict is negotiated, the persons involved in the conflict agree on certain rules. These rules include the idea that the parties will not avoid the conflict but engage in it actively.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Participative Leadership - Personal Development
Summer vacations are a great opportunity for a student to work in various domains and organizations in order to get an idea of various styles of leadership. I took this opportunity to study managerial styles during two…
Paper Undergraduate
Audience Analysis -- Corporate Presentations
Being called in to present business facts and issues, such as the in the case that I will be using in this article, (i.e. A presentation of quarterly sales information at an in-person meeting with a group of…
Paper High School
Paul Keating\'s Redfern Speech
Paul Keating's speech at Redfern Park in Sydney is a brilliant example of rhetoric and experienced political spin. The speech is well-executed and shows solid use of fallacy and the three modes of persuasion: pathos, ethos, and logos. The use of rhetorical devices is akin an expert sushi chef using his knives—rapid, precise, stunning. The use of epiphora, particularly in tricolon format, lends both cadence and emphasis. The word imagine is used in this manner and in epiphora convention, as the word is repeated in successive clauses. The connotation of the word confident is made more powerful by its proximity to the word imagine. Further, antithesis is threaded throughout by deliberate distinctions between non-Aboriginal and indigenous Australians, and presumably to use the favored terms of reference for every member of the audience—as it is a political speech. There is a great divide between the experiences and treatment of the privileged primarily white non-indigenous citizens of Australia and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island people. Keating does not shy away from this fact. Indeed, he even underscores the confounding problem by reminding the now privileged Australians that they were not always so, through his use of erotema. He asks again and again, if Australia did not open its doors and extend its hands to the dispossessed people of Ireland, Britain, Europe, and Asia.