Essay Topic Hub

Revenge
Essays

1,086+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,086 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Revenge is a compelling subject in academic writing because it sits at the intersection of ethics, psychology, literature, and law. Students encounter it across disciplines — from literature and philosophy courses examining moral justice to criminal law classes analyzing punishment and retribution. What makes revenge intellectually rich is the tension it creates between emotional justification and ethical consequence, between a character's or society's desire for satisfaction and the cost of pursuing it. Works like The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, Shakespeare's Hamlet, Titus Andronicus, The Revenger's Tragedy, and the ancient Greek Oresteia all place revenge at the center of their moral universes, giving students a wide literary tradition to analyze.

The papers archived here approach revenge from several distinct angles. Literary analysis is the most common, with essays examining how specific characters — particularly sons avenging fathers — navigate moral ambiguity, madness, and consequence. Comparative approaches appear frequently, setting texts like Hamlet against The Revenger's Tragedy, or contrasting adaptations of The Count of Monte Cristo. Some essays take an ethical or philosophical angle, asking whether a quest for revenge can ever be morally just. Others draw on religious frameworks or principles of criminal law to evaluate revenge against broader systems of justice.

A strong essay on revenge requires a focused, arguable thesis — not simply that revenge appears in a text, but what the work ultimately claims about its moral or psychological consequences. Literary evidence drawn from character actions, motivation, and outcome tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating revenge as self-evidently wrong or justified without engaging the genuine complexity the source material presents.

1,086 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Homer's Iliad and its literary significance
Homer's The Iliad proves to be insightful reading because even today, it represents the nature of man through the Achilles and Hektor. Both of these men are heroes but they have very different characters and it is…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Madness Depicted in Poe Stories
Madness always makes an appearance in Edgar Allan Poe storiesand what makes the madness especially interesting is the fact that it is always associated with some flaw in the personality.
Paper Doctorate
Music on Teens Actions in the Past
In the past 40 years all kinds of music has turned out to be more and more overt predominantly towards the negative side like sex, drugs, aggression and violence. Lately two of the genres which have caught great attention is hard rock music and rap music. In most of the cases, the lyrics of the music are made in such a way that they induce negativity in the developing minds of the teenagers. This negativity is reflected in their actions in the form of drug abuse, aggression, violence, sex and rebellious actions towards parents, family, family and society in general. This kind of negative music is a major concern these days because it poses mental and physical threat to the teens of today. Some of the other alarming effects of such music are pregnancy, STDs, accidents, killing and this has resulted to be the normal lifestyle for most of the teens today. This paper discusses the different types of music and the effects each one has on the actions and behavior of teens
Research Paper Doctorate
Shakespeare William Shakespeare Is One
William Shakespeare is one of the most famous playwrights of the English literature and one of the titans of the Renaissance movement. His works gave way to new forms of literary creations, or the perfection of old ones.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The merchant of Venice
¶ … Merchant of Venice is a framework for expressing Shakespeare's anti-slavery sentiments in a most vivid and gruesome way. It has been argued that it is too obvious, for Shakespeare to be expressing these sentiments,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Dracula Bram Stoker\'s Dracula Bram
Bram Stoker's Dracula opens in mysterious, romantic, and spooky Transylvania in Eastern Europe, where English lawyer Jonathan Harked finds himself a long way from modern, rational, and busy city life of his native London.
Paper Undergraduate
Water for Chocolate -- Last
As the final third of the novel opens, Tita fears that she is pregnant from her and Pedro's sexual encounter. Pedro is happy about this, and wants to run away with Tita until he remembers his responsibilities to his…
Paper Undergraduate
Moby Dick by Herman Melville
In this book, the author narrates a whaling adventure that the Captain Ahab hunts Moby Dick, the extremely large white whale that previously bit the Captain's leg him thus went after the whale to have his revenge --…
Research Paper Masters
Symbols of Hot and Cold
The feelings of hot and cold are ones that we often consider simple. We either are hot, or we either are cold and the state of being definitely impacts is capabilities for behavior in for action. Yet, literature often takes every day concept and in powers them with an additional sense of meaning that signifies deeper concepts and emotions. This is exactly what several short stories do, including "1/3, 1/3, 1/3" by Richard Brautigan, "The Amish Farmer" by Vance Bourjaily, "The Ledge" by Lawrence Sargent Hall, and finally "Weekend" by Ann Beattie. Each of the short stories creates an additional layer of meaning behind the connotations of hot and cold; often the heat represents a sense of livelihood and vivaciousness, while the image of cold represent misery and death.
Paper High School
Hamlet and Oedipus Though Written
This essay compares and contrasts the characters of Hamlet and Oedipus. Both suffer from hubris in their attempts to avenge a murdered father, but the results are vastly different. Comparing the two results reveals that Oedipus' true enemy is not himself, but rather the social and cultural hegemony in which he finds himself. He is unable to confront this hegemony, whereas Hamlet is successful in bringing down the entire country of Denmark.