Essay Topic Hub

Poetry
Essays

1,697+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,697 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Poetry is one of the oldest and most studied forms of literary expression, making it a central subject in literature courses from introductory composition to advanced seminars. Students are drawn to it because it compresses language into concentrated meaning, requiring close attention to form, voice, tone, and imagery. The range of poets represented in academic writing is wide, spanning figures such as Anne Bradstreet, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Charles Bukowski, Langston Hughes, and N. Scott Momaday, whose theoretical writing on language and imagination extends poetry's relevance into questions of culture and identity. Shelley's "Defence of Poetry" further gives students a critical framework for thinking about what poetry does and why it matters as an art form.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays set poets or individual poems against one another to examine differences in style, theme, or historical context. Biographical analyses, such as those focusing on Paul Laurence Dunbar's life alongside his work, treat a poet's experience as essential context for interpretation. Other papers offer close evaluations of single poems, as with Charles Bukowski's work, while broader argumentative essays address poetry's social and national significance. Some writers approach poetry through adjacent disciplines, incorporating musical or linguistic analysis to enrich their readings.

A strong essay on poetry builds its thesis around a specific, arguable claim rather than a general observation about a poem being meaningful or emotional. Evidence drawn from the text itself — word choice, structure, repetition, and imagery — carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is summarizing what a poem says rather than analyzing how it achieves its effects on the reader.

1,697 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Community, 9/11, and the Imagined Nation After Tragedy
In general, the idea of community conveys two rather distinct messages. It is often used to refer to a social unit of varying size that shares common values, or a national or international community in which the individuals have something unique or a set of principles and beliefs that are common to most of the group. Events such as 9/11, however, change the way community is "imagined." This essay focuses on a painting/photograph and a poem to prove that imagined communities transcend time and demographics to form freedom in adversity.
Research Paper Doctorate
thucydides and democracy
Salvaging Democracy consent of the governed) then one is not in a democracy, though democratic elements may exist. America, for example, was founded as a republic and not as a democracy (though with time it has shifted…
Research Paper Doctorate
Do Not Go Quietly Into That Good Night?
Dylan Thomas once said of himself, "I hold a beast, an angel, and a madman in me, and my enquiry is as to their working, and my problem is their subjugation and victory, downthrow and upheaval, and my effort is their…
Research Paper Doctorate
Sir Francis Drake: life and legacy
Sir Francis Drake was a British explorer, slave-trader, privateer, a pirate working for a government, in the service of England, mayor of Plymouth, England, and naval officer. Driven by early conflict with Catholic…
Research Paper Doctorate
Sixties and the Early Seventies Were Dominated
¶ … sixties and the early seventies were dominated by bands that were heavily promoted by the music industry. The music was very commercial and user friendly. This trend was responsible for another trend, a backlash…
Paper Undergraduate
Dance Arts and Movement
Laban Movement Analysis Method (LMA) is a method of teaching not only dance, but of explaining and interpreting human movement and interaction. The idea of movement, or Tanztheater, is central to the method and overall…
Paper Doctorate
Religion and Social Reform in the 1920s
The Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified in 1919, and the following year Prohibition took effect in the United States. Although uninformed parties tend to assume this was the result of some early…
Research Paper Doctorate
William Butler Yeats: life, works, and literary significance
¶ … Poetry of William Butler Yeats [...] theme of Ireland in Yeats poetry and show in several poems how this one theme is developed and changed over time. Poems discussed are "To Ireland in the Coming Times," "Down at…
Research Paper Doctorate
History concepts and applications
¶ … Hellenic sculpture and Hellenistic sculpture? First, the Greek Hellenic period dates from 900-323 B.C., and the Hellenistic period came right after that and lasted until 31 B.C.
Research Paper Doctorate
Robert Frost: life, work, and literary legacy
Robert Frost wrote, "I have written to keep the over curious out of the secret places in my mind both in my verse and in my letters." In a poem, he wrote, "I have been one acquainted with the night." Those unfamiliar…