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 Doctorate
Argumentative writing: structure, techniques, and applications
Character is one of the driving forces behind great literature. To the extent that a writer can create "real" fictional characters, characters who are both compelling and honest, characters who personify the human…
Research Paper Doctorate
Stalking: Types, Victims, and Laws in the United States
Stalking may be defined as any sort of unwanted contact a person called the stalker makes on the intended victim, which could directly or indirectly cause one or more of the following criminal actions, which are fear of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Les Liaisons Dangereuses Pierre Choderlos
Pierre Choderlos de Laclos' famous eighteen century novel, Les liaisons dangereuses, is written in the epistolary form, and has two main protagonists: Marquise de Merteuil and the Vicomte de Valmont.
Paper Undergraduate
Workplace Safety and Situational Crisis Management Guide
Deadly violence in the workplace is a phenomenon that grew substantially toward the last few decades of the 20th century, before which it occurred so infrequently that it was completely unheard of in many places.
Research Paper Doctorate
Oroonoko or the Royal Slave
The first two paragraphs serve as an introduction to the novella, and try to show the reader this is supposed to be a true story. Just reading these first two paragraphs, it sounds as if this could be a romance or a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Critical reading and interpretation strategies
¶ … Moral Decline in Hamlet and the Importance of Being Earnest
Paper Doctorate
Causality Is a Legal Term
Causality is a legal term that describes the relationship between an event or cause and a second or additional event, the effect. This assumes that the second event is the consequence of the first (Lippman, p. 133). Cause in fact indicates that if X had not acted (the assault), Z would never have been taken to the hospital with an injury. X set the events in motion, which them spiralted out of control. In addition, X wanted more revenge, so mixed poison for Z, unbeknownst to the doctor or to Z.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Sopranos and American television drama
The era of the gangster movies began shortly after the era of organized crime in the United States first began. The outlaw, in one form or another, has always been a fascination of mainstream America, and this has been…
Paper Undergraduate
Current Events Elisabeth Bumiller\'s Report
Elisabeth Bumiller's report from the U.S. aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt is published on the 23rd of February, 2009, in the New York Times, under the title: From a Carrier, Another View of America's Air War in…
Paper High School
Individual versus established order
Social Order and Justice: An Exploration of Adaptability and Applicability