Essay Topic Hub

Rituals
Essays

975+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Rituals are structured, symbolic practices that communities and individuals use to mark meaning, reinforce belief, and maintain social order. In religious studies and related disciplines such as anthropology, sociology, and cultural studies, rituals occupy a central place because they reveal how societies organize themselves around shared values and sacred experiences. Durkheim's arguments about the sacred as an essential element of social cohesion appear directly in coursework on this topic, and texts like Horace Miner's "Body Ritual Among the Nacirema" are commonly assigned to prompt students to examine how ritual functions even in secular, everyday life. Works such as Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha and traditions like Zen Buddhism further extend the conversation into questions of personal transformation and spiritual practice across cultures.

The papers gathered here approach rituals from a wide range of angles. Some take a comparative cultural perspective, examining death and dying practices across developed and developing societies. Others engage in literary and philosophical analysis, drawing on myth — such as the story of Demeter and Persephone — to explore the relationship between narrative and ritual. Critical and sociological approaches also appear, including analyses of modern consumer spaces as sacred environments and explorations of resistance rituals within African Atlantic communities. Durkheim and modernity, pop culture, and cultural competency each serve as additional lenses through which ritual practice is examined.

A strong essay on rituals needs a focused thesis that connects a specific practice to a broader claim about culture, belief, or social function. Evidence drawn from primary texts, ethnographic examples, or theoretical frameworks tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating ritual as mere tradition without analyzing the underlying meanings and power structures it reinforces or challenges.

975 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Holy saturation: religious symbolism and visual intensity
The traditional, or Orthodox view, is that the church is a necessary medium between the laity and God, and that without the church and the hierarchy of clergy, the congregation would be unable to attain the wisdom of God.
Essay Doctorate
Project life cycle stages and nuclear power plant construction planning
The paper answers five questions all related to project management. Project life cycle is defined and the various phases involved in project life cycle defined. The importance if stakeholder analysis on the success of a project is also discussed. The various stakeholders who form a software upgrade project have also been listed. The effects of organizational culture on project management are discussed.
Research Paper Doctorate
Toni Morrison: Sula Toni Morrison\'s
Toni Morrison's Sula is one of her masterpieces and a work that turned her into one of the most powerful African-American writers of our times. What strikes the readers about Toni Morrison's protagonist is Sula is her…
Research Paper Doctorate
Joseph Smith and the Book
Joseph Smith, Jr. was the fourth child of Joseph Sr. And Lucy Smack and born in Sharon, Vermont on December 23, 1805. The Smith family lived under arduous and unstable financial circumstances that compelled them to move…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Leadership Models Man, Like All
Man, like all other primates, evolved as a social creature for whom communal living and mutual cooperation within the human community is more natural, and preferable for the individual, than solitary existence.
Research Paper Undergraduate
One hundred years of solitude
Time is one of the major themes in One Hundred Years of Solitude. For the characters, time is alternatively fast paced, and stagnant. When Ursula considers time, she finds it appears to be moving in a circle: "What did…
Paper Undergraduate
Spencer, Herbert. 1860. The Social
Spencer, Herbert. 1860. The Social Organization. The Westminster Review. In Anthropological Theory: An Introductory Theory. Fourth Edition. R. McGee and Richard Warms. McGraw Hill.
Paper Undergraduate
Dying on Death and Dying:
On Death and Dying: A Review of Historical Perspectives and Implications for Modern Society
Paper High School
Havel on Meaning and Awareness
Vaclev Havel (1988) wrote, "The tragedy of modern man is not that he knows less and less about the meaning of his own life, but that it bothers him less and less" (p. 237).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Twelve O'Clock High and Be-Know-Do leadership framework
Dramatic, major changes are sometimes difficult, whether in the civilian industry or in government institutions such as the military. Often times a leader (whether a politician or an officer) who attempts to institute…