Essay Topic Hub

Prose
Essays

490+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

490 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Prose is one of the foundational subjects in English studies, encompassing the full range of written language that does not follow a formal metrical structure. Students encounter it across courses in literary analysis, composition theory, grammar, and cultural history, where it serves as both an object of study and a medium of expression. Its academic interest lies in the vast territory it covers — fiction, nonfiction, personal narrative, and formal exposition — and in the way writers manipulate prose style to shape a reader's sense of meaning, voice, and reality. Works such as Nathaniel Hawthorne's fiction, Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, William Byrd's History of the Dividing Line, Wole Soyinka's The Lion and the Jewel, and the experimental writing of Djuna Barnes all appear as touchstones for understanding how prose operates across different traditions and periods.

Student essays on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some pursue close reading and formal analysis, examining how a specific author's writing style generates particular effects on the reader. Others adopt comparative or hybrid angles, exploring the confluence of prose and poetry, or the boundary between fiction and nonfiction in contexts like nineteenth-century England and the grotesque. Historical and cultural approaches examine how prose reflects the lives and nature of the societies that produce it, while grammar-focused essays address the structural mechanics underlying effective writing.

A strong essay on prose begins with a clearly scoped thesis that identifies a specific stylistic, formal, or thematic argument rather than simply describing a work's content. Evidence drawn from close attention to language — sentence rhythm, diction, tone, and structure — carries the most weight. Writers should resist treating prose as a neutral container for ideas; the way something is written is inseparable from what it means, and overlooking that connection is the most common weakness in essays on this subject.

Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Confluence of Prose and Poetry
Women, under the auspices of a system of marriage that left this with very little recourse or power to prosper on their own often felt a sense of powerlessness that encompassed their whole mind and often showed in…
Paper Undergraduate
Milton-When I Consider How My
Ere half my days in this dark world and wide,
Research Paper Undergraduate
James Joyce\'s Araby and Haruki
James Joyce's "Araby" and Haruki Muraka's "On Seeing the 100% Perfect Girl One Beautiful April Morning"
Research Paper Doctorate
Everyman vs. The Song of Roland: A Medieval Literature Comparison
¶ … Everyman," and "The Song of Roland," both written by anonymous authors. Specifically, it will compare and contrast the two texts, illustrating their commonalities and distinct differences.
Paper Doctorate
Writing style and sources in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood
Djuna Barnes's 1938 novel Nightwood is a dark and evocative work of prose that reads like poetry. Barnes's diction includes words like "encomiums" as well as what were at the time new French imports like chic (p.
Paper Undergraduate
Becoming American: immigration and national identity
Chitra Bajerjee Divakaruni and Eric Liu are two successful Americans who have mainly three things in common that come to mind at a first glance at their biographies: their nationality (they are both American), their…
Research Paper Doctorate
Civil disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
To protest the American government's involvement in the Mexican War of 1846-1848, Henry David Thoreau refused to pay his taxes and was quickly thrown into prison as a result of his nonviolent act of "Civil…
Research Paper Doctorate
Classic Pieces of Literature. The Writer Explores
¶ … classic pieces of literature. The writer explores the primary texts, and secondary sources to develop a critical analysis of the characters and their dysfunction and how escapism is used in both situations.
Paper Undergraduate
Mac Flecknoe the Poem Mac
The poem Mac Flecknoe was written by John Dryden in 1678 but was not published until 1682 (Broich, 1990). Dryden's poem is considered in the genre satire or mock-heroic poetry (Broich, 1990).
Paper Undergraduate
Raven an Explication of Edgar
An Explication of Edgar Allen Poe's "The Raven"