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:
Research Paper Doctorate
Joyce Carol Oates: A Stylistic
Joyce Carol Oates: A Stylistic Move from the Journalistic to the Literary
Research Paper Doctorate
Pursuit of Individualism and Objectivity
In the late Middle Ages, during the late 14th century, Europe, particularly Italy, had experienced "rebirth" after a series of chaos that is the Black Plague have wiped out the whole of European Civilization.
Paper Doctorate
Cool, Or: He Even Stopped for Green
¶ … Cool, or: He Even Stopped for Green Lights
Research Paper Undergraduate
Landscape Neoclassical Painting One Unifying
One unifying characteristic of the works of the English and American Romantic poets Shelley, Keats, and Whitman is that all of these writers used images of nature to further their artistic self-expression.
Essay Doctorate
T.S. Eliot and Amy Lowell the Poetic
This paper analyzes two American poems from the early part of the twentieth century: Amy Lowell's "Madonna of the Evening Flowers" and T.S. Eliot's "Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock." The emphasis is on the different handling of the traditional genre of love poetry. Lowell is understood as using religious imagery to approach the love poem and "make it new" (in Ezra Pound's words). Eliot by contrast uses effects of comedy and satire to create a collage-effect to renovate the idea of a love-poem. Conclusion describes Lowell's use of religious imagery as being the only available means whereby to approach writing a lesbian love-poem at the time of the First World War--to that extent, Lowell's poem is described as being more "shocking" and modern (despite its comparatively placid exterior) than Eliot's poem.
Paper Doctorate
Zen Buddhism, to Present Some
¶ … Zen Buddhism, to present some introductory notes, practices and the significance of rituals. Besides the actual facts or historical proof, spread around the world, as well as the presentation of significant…
Research Paper Doctorate
Alexander Pope Epistle to Richard Boyle Earl of Burlington the Use of Riches
Alexander Pope's 'Epistle to Burlington' (1731)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Plato What Is the Problem
What is the problem of truth? What are two of the main types of obstacles to the pursuit of truth? How does Zen practice help to overcome one type of obstacle? How does Socrates work help to overcome another type of…
Paper Masters
Language and grammar in Walt Whitman's poetry
Spider's Objective In Whitman And Dickinson
Essay High School
Shakespeares Sonnets
An analysis of how seasonal symbolism is used in three of Shakespeare's sonnets. For this paper, sonnets 18, 73, and 97 were analyzed to determine how seasonal symbolism is used. Sonnet 18's seasonal symbolism is used to emphasize and describe beauty, sonnet 73's seasonal symbolism is used to illustrate and emphasize the passage of time, and sonnet 97's seasonal symbolism is used to describe the emptiness the narrator feels when he is separated from the woman he loves.