Essay Topic Hub

Plays
Essays

3,648+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

3,648 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Plays, as a literary and performative form, occupy a central place in arts and humanities education. Students encounter dramatic texts across courses in literature, theater studies, and cultural criticism, where the genre invites analysis of language, structure, character, and social meaning. Works like Oedipus the King, Antigone, and the plays of William Shakespeare have long served as foundational texts, while more contemporary works by figures such as Lorraine Hansberry, Amiri Baraka, and Timberlake Wertenbaker push discussions toward questions of race, gender, and identity. Drama is academically compelling because it operates on multiple levels simultaneously — as written text, staged performance, and cultural artifact — making it a rich subject for interpretation and argument.

Student papers on this topic approach dramatic works from a range of analytical angles. Some essays take a comparative approach, placing two plays in dialogue — such as examining Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun alongside Baraka's Dutchman — to draw out thematic contrasts around race and belonging. Others focus on character psychology, exploring patterns like father-son dysfunction or representations of insanity in Shakespeare. Feminist frameworks appear in discussions of dramatic performance, while historical and cultural context shapes readings of works by Pushkin and others. Close textual analysis of specific passages is also a common method.

A strong essay on plays begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad plot summary. Evidence drawn directly from the dramatic text — dialogue, stage directions, structural choices — carries the most weight, and secondary criticism can help support interpretation. The most common pitfall is treating a play purely as a story rather than engaging with its theatrical and rhetorical dimensions, which are essential to how drama creates meaning.

3,648 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Greek drama and its historical significance
Greek Drama and Its Effects on Drama Today
Paper Doctorate
Generations of Winter,\" by Vassily Aksyonov. Specifically,
¶ … Generations of Winter," by Vassily Aksyonov. Specifically, it will discuss literary themes and approaches used by the author and how the work reflects the political and social environment of the time.
Research Paper Doctorate
Racism, Violence, and Hunger in Richard Wright's Fiction
¶ … Richard Wright's social themes (e.g., racism) in any one of his short stories. Specifically it will discuss "Black Boy," and "Native Son."
Research Paper Doctorate
Personality: Behavior, Thoughts, Motives, and Emotions Explained
Personality: Behavior, Thoughts, Motives, and Emotions That Characterize a Person
Paper High School
Where Are the Children? by Mary Higgins Clark: A Book Review
The novel Where are the Children? By Mary Higgins Clark falls into the genre of a suspenseful mystery. The bulk of the novel involves Nancy Harmon, the protagonist. We meet her after she has moved from California to…
Essay Doctorate
Kabuki drama: production, historical context, and contemporary performance challenges
This paper discusses the Japanese art dramatic dance form called Kabuki. This was started in 1603 and has been enacted for four hundred years. There are still modern performances of Kabuki which are performed all over the world both in Japanese cultures and in those without an Asian influence whatsoever. This proves that it is still a vialbe art form.
Paper Doctorate
Graves disease: causes, symptoms, and treatment
This paper discusses the medical condition Grave's disease. This condition is caused by bonding of antibodies within the thyroid gland and hyperthyroidism. Although the cause is still not completely known, it is believed that heredity plays a large part in whether or not someone will get Grave's diseases. Treatments include medication, radiation, and surgery.
Paper Doctorate
Conflict Resolution Conflict Can Be
This paper is on conflict resolution. The human being is an unpredictable living being and the most vulnerable too. There are millions of dimensions in which it has been studied. But every dimension has its own sub dimensions. Conflict is one part of it which is a deep rooted discussion which may lead a person in a state of anger, sadness, coma, anxiety, frustration, madness, depression, tension and much more. One can think how a person gets sad and angry at one moment. It is human, when he is not able doing something he/she becomes sad and get angry why he/she cannot be able to do. The feeling of helplessness is the factor that plays a part here.
Paper Doctorate
Gaining Insight Into System One
This is an essay on System One and Two (Kahneman). System One is the instinctive primitive system that compels biased subjective thinking. It is the type of thinking that is prejudicial and irrational but happens so fast and subconsciously that I am unaware of it. System One is the system that is unhelpful for researchers and is the type of thinking that we wish to avoid. Recognizing that my instinctive split-second decision making shares these characteristics will make me all the more conscientious of trying to avoid it. We have a tendency moreover to assert that we are not biased, non-prejudicial, and so forth. Awareness of this ripple of instinctive reaction that is hardly, if at all, registered by us can make us think otherwise. It may be, after all, that we are subjective and judgmental even without our realizing it. Knowledge of this dual system, can, consequently, help us in our research by making us less smug about our alleged objectivity and by making us more careful to be as objective as possible.
Paper Undergraduate
Roland Joffe\'s the Mission Provides
Roland Joffe's the Mission provides insight regarding conditions in Latin America during the eighteenth century. The film focuses on Rodrigo Mendoza, a mercenary and slaver who gradually comes to acknowledge the…