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:
Research Paper Doctorate
Sex Body and Identity
¶ … identity institutionalized in mainstream culture?
Thesis Undergraduate
Media Framing and Public Perception of Hurricane Katrina
The Role of Media in Affecting Public Perception of Hurricane Katrina 'Victims'
Paper Undergraduate
Second World by Parag Khanna
The author Parag Khanna takes on an ambitious journey in researching and writing the book the Second World: Empires and Influence in the New Global World by visiting dozens of countries and both observing and…
Paper Doctorate
City of Hope Team Develops
¶ … City of Hope team develops "smart bomb" to neutralize HIV"
Essay Doctorate
Political objectivity and reader interpretation in The Tortilla Curtain
Because Boyle has written a fable -- a fiction -- and not an investigative report on immigration and classism, he was able to sympathetically present both Candido Rincon and Delaney Mossbacher, striped to their naked…
Research Paper Doctorate
Roman culture: history, society, and legacy
The 1960 film Spartacus claims to tell the story of the famous slave revolt, also known as the Gladiator War, which terrorized Rome for years and can be pinpointed as one of the most influential causes of the eventual…
Paper Undergraduate
Culture and Media Works Sexual
Media today is one of the most common grounds used to communicate or get a message across. It has readily increased its accessibility and its reach to people with phenomenon of globalization. Any individual who has access to any form of visual media today knows how the issue of "sex" has become a common term in the media. It is used in different ways and on different levels in different countries but it is reasonable to state that the sexual objectification is being used in media today and is presented in such an open manner that it can simply not be disregarded anymore (Hall, 1998).
Thesis Doctorate
Michelangelo: life, work, and legacy
Michelangelo's Emphasis on Visual Effects
Paper Masters
China Waiting by Ha Jun:
A Novel and Its Portrayal of Chinese Friction
Research Paper Undergraduate
Elements and their properties in science
It is often that a point of view defines a story as a critical element, and this is the case in both John Updike's "A&P" and William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily." Both stories share the first person point of view,…