Essay Topic Hub

Reaction
Essays

4,008+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

4,008 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
What is Reaction?

Reaction as an academic topic appears across English studies whenever students are asked to engage personally and critically with a text, film, artwork, event, or idea. Rather than presenting original research arguments alone, reaction-based writing asks students to record and analyze their own intellectual and emotional responses, making it common in composition courses, humanities surveys, and introductory literature classes. The topic spans an unusually wide range of subjects — from historical documentary and visual art movements like Art Nouveau and the Counter Reformation to philosophy, psychology, and social phenomena — because the underlying task is less about a fixed subject and more about the writer's relationship to it.

The archived papers on this topic reflect that breadth. Some take a personal, reflective approach, responding to documentaries, films, or social experiments such as violating social norms. Others engage analytically with movements like Romanticism and Postmodernism, examining how ideas about nature, the individual, and change resonate with or challenge the writer's existing views. Still others treat reaction as a framework for evaluating specific theories, legislation like the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, or fields like open source software, blending personal perspective with structured critique.

A strong reaction essay anchors the writer's response in specific evidence from the source material rather than vague impressions. The thesis should identify not just what you felt but why — what in the source provoked a shift in thinking or reinforced a prior view. Concrete references to moments, arguments, or images carry far more weight than general summary. The most common pitfall is letting the essay become pure description; the goal is always to analyze the reaction itself, treating your own mind as a subject worth examining critically.

4,008 papers
Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Blackout for the Purposes of This Project,
This paper is a write-up about an experiment to live without modern technology. I took this to include smartphones, televisions, computers, but I kept the car, the radio and other things that old. The journal notes how I felt about all this, and how the people around me reacted. This is high school level.
Research Paper Doctorate
Monetary Policy of the ECB
Interest Rate 'Smoothing' Practice of ECB
Essay Undergraduate
Foreign exchange markets and the Euro currency dynamics
Analysis is the toughest work of the world it needs ad hoc research and critical speculations. Analysis of a thing has a meaning of manifold. There are numerous kinds of analysis includes financial analysis, investment…
Research Paper Undergraduate
John Donne Paraphrase of Donne\'s
Batter my heart, three-personed God; for you
Paper Undergraduate
Boundaries with teenagers: establishing healthy limits and communication
Townsend, John. Boundaries with Teens: When to say yes, how to say no. Zondervan, 2006.
Research Paper Doctorate
Butoh Japanese dance, Artaud's theater, and postmodern différance
Butoh is a Japanese art form that emerged in 1959 as a response to western oppression. Western political dominance had a serious impact on aesthetic sense of dancer Tatsumi Hijikata who developed a new form of dance…
Paper High School
Classical Music Is the Final
Modern classical music is the final period of western classical music and it originates from the 1940s to the present. "Like modern art, modern music has focused on variety and radical experimentation. Also like modern art, modern classical music witnessed a continuation of prewar developments (Spielvogel, 942). Modern classical music was a direct reflection of the multitude of changes that were sweeping through society that forced individuals to re-evaluate their roles as individuals, men, women and consumers.
Essay Doctorate
Bad Faith as Viewed by Jean-Paul Sartre
¶ … Bad Faith" as viewed by Jean-Paul Sartre in "Being and Nothingness" and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. In "The Darkness of the Cave."
Research Paper Undergraduate
Empathy change through information exposure on war
¶ … empathy change, if any, with regard to the realities of war. The writer produces a problem statement, a short literature review, an explanation of method to be used and the way the data will be collected.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hamlet by William Shakespeare Hamlet\'s
¶ … Hamlet by William Shakespeare [...] Hamlet's love for Ophelia, including her tragic life and death. Hamlet seems to love Ophelia throughout this tragedy, and Ophelia is convinced of his love.