Essay Topic Hub

Reconstruction
Essays

845+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Reconstruction refers to the turbulent period following the American Civil War during which the federal government sought to reintegrate the defeated Southern states and define the legal and social status of formerly enslaved people. It is a foundational subject in American history courses and African American history curricula alike, drawing attention because it represents a pivotal moment when the United States was forced to confront the contradictions between its democratic ideals and the legacy of slavery. The period raises enduring questions about citizenship, racial equality, and federal power that continue to shape scholarly and public debate.

Student essays on this topic approach Reconstruction from several distinct angles. Many examine whether the era should be judged a success or a failure, weighing political gains against the violent backlash that ultimately undermined them. Others focus on the experiences of Black Americans navigating freedom, including movements such as the Exodusters documented by Nell Irvin Painter. Comparative analyses place Reconstruction alongside broader developments like industrialization, the rise of big business, and labor conflict in the late nineteenth century. Some papers concentrate specifically on the American South, tracing how white resistance and shifting federal priorities shaped the lives of freed people and poor whites alike.

A strong essay on Reconstruction establishes a clear, arguable thesis rather than simply narrating events. Evidence drawn from political outcomes, education access, and economic conditions for Black and white Southerners tends to carry the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating Reconstruction as an isolated episode; connecting it to the longer arc of African American history from 1865 onward produces a more persuasive and historically grounded argument.

845 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Emily and Miss Brill: Living in the Past vs. Reality
¶ … Miss Emily and Miss Brill are two highly interesting yet complex characters that refuse to accept change and are thus stubbornly or naively living in the past. The two women symbolize destruction and decay of the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Political Parties and Bilingual Education Politics, Throughout
Political Parties and Bilingual Education
Research Paper Doctorate
History concepts and applications
¶ … share with you my life story and some American History. Throughout this paper we will discuss the many changes that took place in America between World War I and the 1970's. We will discuss the causes of the war and…
Paper Masters
Construction of a Collective Memory Between Jewish
Assmann (2001) writes that sociologist Maurice Halbwachs and Aby Warburg, art historian developed two theories of "collective or social memory." (p.125) Assmann states of collective or social memory that the "…specific character that a person derives from belonging to a distinct society and culture is not seen to maintain itself for generations as a result of phylogenetic evolution, but rather as a result of socialization and customs." (2001, p.125) The cultural survival of this group or type of what Assmann refers to as a "pseudo-species" is stated to be a "function of cultural memory." (2001, p.125) This study examines the construction of a collective cultural memory in Turkey by present day Jewish and Islamic Turks.
Paper Doctorate
Western expansion, mythology, and impact on Native populations in the Gilded Age
The United States went through a surplus of superficial changes from 1865 to the present day. Although many issues in the American way of life were addressed, many of these issues were dealt with in only a marginally effective way at best. Many such changes were introduced in the political systems, yet political posturing was slow or inept to bring social change to the American system of government has many which has strengths and weakness. Although most Americans are the freest people on the planet, this paradigm is only true with many reservations. In fact, one way to look at freedom would be to consider that opposite of freedom – incarceration. Currently the United States dominates the world in number of prisoners both per capita as well as the total population.
Paper Doctorate
African American westward migration patterns and history
Prior to the 1960s and 1970s, very little was written about black participation in Western expansion from the colonial period to the 19th Century, much less about black and Native American cooperation against slavery.
Essay Doctorate
Character War Has Remained an Important Phenomenon
War has remained an important phenomenon used by the states to achieve their goals when the diplomacy failed. Previously, many philosophers has worked over war and defined it as a phenomenon that has a specific unpredictable nature. Similarly, they also provided us with certain principles, which are more often valid for most of the wars that have taken place so far. This paper discusses the campaign where the U.S military ignored certain principles, misjudged the character of it and faced losses in Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Research Paper Doctorate
History from 1865 to 1960
¶ … American history as a radical and revolutionary society. Specifically, it will discuss the works of "The Jungle," by Upton Sinclair, and "Coming of Age in Mississippi," by Anne Moody.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Failures of Civil War Reconstruction in the South
After the close of the Civil War in 1865, the U.S. government initiated a wide-ranging policy of reconstruction aimed at rebuilding the American South. This policy, made up of a first and second reconstruction, offered…
Research Paper Doctorate
African American literature: history and themes
This work discusses themes in Du Bois "The Souls of Black Folks" as they are expressed in the work as well as in two other works, Jacobs' "Tales in the Life of a Slave Girl" and Wilson's "Our Nig"