Essay Topic Hub

Portrayal
Essays

948+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Portrayal as an academic topic concerns how subjects — people, groups, institutions, or ideas — are represented across media, literature, and culture. It appears in courses ranging from film studies and literary analysis to sociology, psychology, and cultural studies. What makes it intellectually compelling is the gap between representation and reality: the choices a filmmaker, novelist, or journalist makes when constructing an image of society reveal assumptions about power, identity, and value. Papers in this area often examine how those choices shape public understanding of issues such as family life, religion, mental health, diversity, and social relationships.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Literary analysis essays examine how specific characters are constructed, as in readings of Holden Caulfield or characters from Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, while others focus on authorial perspective, such as Hesse's portrayal of women in Narcissus and Goldmund. Film-focused essays take a cultural or psychological angle, analyzing how movies like Maid in Manhattan or As Good as It Gets represent American family life, religion, or psychopathology. Some papers move into social and political territory, treating media portrayals of real events and figures as evidence of broader cultural attitudes toward race, diversity, and justice.

A strong essay on portrayal grounds its argument in specific textual or visual evidence, moving beyond summary to explain what a representation means and what it reinforces or challenges within its social context. The thesis should take a clear position on what a portrayal accomplishes, not merely describe it. The most common pitfall is treating representation as straightforward reflection rather than as a constructed, selective act shaped by historical and cultural pressures.

948 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Derrida, Foucault, Plato, and Aristotle: philosophical perspectives
Philosophy is often mistakenly viewed as a single trajectory, leading from Socrates to Plato to Aristotle and through the rest of the classical period, hibernating somewhat during the Dark Ages, and being restored again…
Paper Undergraduate
Non Canonical Books Introduction Study
Introduction study of the non-canonical books, those books left out of the Old and New Testaments of the Bible, stands informed by the books that were included in the Old and New Testaments.
Paper Undergraduate
Economics in Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own
Woolf on the Economics of Gender Inequality The seeds of gender equality, however elusive such a thing may continue to be, were surely planted by the frustration of women confined to the roles crafted by longstanding…
Paper Doctorate
Film Analysis, Sophie\'s Choice Film
What makes a truly great film? Is it critical acclaim? Is it the ability to win an Academy Award? Is it the box office revenue? While these factors may play a part in a movie's overall "success," to me, a really great film is simply one that leaves you thinking about it long after you've left the theater or shut off the television. It is this kind of movie that really stays with you and gets into your mind. You find yourself thinking about the scenery, the costumes, the characters and their lives, not once focusing on the notion: "it's just a movie." There are so many different components that work together to create a great film, but in my opinion, a film cannot be great without superb acting, sound and music, and cinematography – all of which are expertly showcased in Sophie's Choice.
Essay Doctorate
Academic Level: Senior University Class: World Art
The present work is focused on undertaking an in-depth analysis of two famous religious paintings: The Virgin and Child by Barnaba da Modena, an Italian painter from the fourteenth century, and The Elevation of the Cross by Peter Paul Rubens, a seventeenth century Flemish artist and diplomat. Following, by comparison, a thorough account of the two works' features, careful observation reveals more than one interpretation.
Research Paper Undergraduate
SISTER(1999) a Portrayal of Mental
¶ … Sister"(1999) a portrayal of mental retardation in a family context
Research Paper Doctorate
Beauty Mean in Art Today?
The concept of beauty is not a linear concept, we can point out from the very beginning towards the fact that the modern concept of beauty has evolved and has developed from beauty in the Antiquity or Middle Ages, up to…
Paper High School
Black Robe Dramatizes the First
Black Robe dramatizes the first encounters between the native peoples of Canada and Europeans. In the film, a Jesuit priest named Father Laforgue comes to live amongst the Huron, hoping to win their souls for Christ.
Research Paper Undergraduate
European Art History From 1400
One of the most important aspects that Reformation brought about was the rejection of icons and religious images into its practice. This meant that Reformed art tended to have no paintings or sculptures of saints, no…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Green Art Inc. Frog's Leap Sculpture Competition Melbourne 2009
GREENART INC. LEAP'S FROG SCULPTURE COMPETITION