Essay Topic Hub

Spanish
Essays

1,391+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,391 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Spain as a subject of academic study appears across disciplines including history, literature, cultural studies, international business, and linguistics. Courses in European history, postcolonial studies, and world literature regularly ask students to engage with Spanish-speaking societies, their institutions, and their global reach. The topic carries particular academic weight because Spain's imperial legacy shaped cultures across multiple continents, making it a productive lens for examining how language, religion, and political power spread and transformed over centuries. Works like J. H. Elliott's Imperial Spain 1469–1716 and texts such as Cervantes's Don Quixote give students both historical frameworks and canonical literary touchstones from which to build arguments.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Historical and political analyses examine periods of imperial expansion and cross-cultural contact, including Spanish-Irish relations in the sixteenth century and interactions between European and Native American cultures. Business-oriented essays apply case-study methods to trade and retail strategy, including import-export frameworks involving Spain. Other papers take a cultural or sociological angle, exploring race, class, family structure, and society within Spanish-speaking contexts, or examining Spanish influence in specific locations such as Miami. Some essays address applied topics like the use of Spanish in medical settings and the role of folkloric medicine.

A strong essay on a Spanish-related topic begins with a focused thesis that specifies a time period, geographic region, or cultural dynamic rather than treating "Spain" or "Spanish" as a monolithic subject. Evidence drawn from primary historical sources, literary texts, or concrete case data carries far more weight than broad generalizations about culture or society. The most common pitfall is conflating Spain with the broader Spanish-speaking world without acknowledging the significant differences in history and context across those societies.

1,391 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Marketing approaches for international business tutoring services
There are a number of factors that affect the location of an international business. Among them are governmental factors, market factors and environmental factors. In terms of governmental factors, these include…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Bilingual Education the United States
The United States of America is home to a large variety of cultures and languages. This is the result of immigration, and also of many generations of immigrants who have preserved the habits and languages of their home…
Paper Undergraduate
Spanish Irish relations in the sixteenth century
Introduction - Overview To give some historical perspective to the battle / siege at Kinsale in 1601, it should be pointed out that the English pretty well controlled Ireland at that time. Author Paul State explains that Queen Elizabeth had attempted to put a stranglehold on Ireland going back ten years. Indeed by the 1590s, England had succeeded in "subduing Ireland, with one outstanding exception," and that was the heartland – the province of Ulster (State, 2009, p. 104). Ulster remained Gaelic in its culture and government, and the most powerful families in Ulster were the O'Neill family and the O'Donnell family, allies to be sure and in the eyes of the English they were a huge threat. Queen Elizabeth worried about the Ulster "lords" (i.e., O'Neill and O'Donnell) breaching English security in the rest of the country. On page 105 State explains that by 1595 Hugh O'Neill had rallied other rebel forces from around Ireland, believing that "…in the end, only by expelling the English from the entire island could he make his title secure." Hence, attacking the English with "musketmen, cavalrymen, and pikemen in imitation of the English," along with "gallowglasses from Scotland" (gallowglasses were mercenary warriors), O'Neill ambushed and harassed the columns of English soldiers (State, 105).
Thesis Undergraduate
Dominican Republic Cultural Heritage: Customs and Values
Role of Mother, Father, Grandparents, and Siblings
Research Paper Undergraduate
Principles, policies, and rules in legislation and police power
Recent changes to the law in Queensland, and to the powers of police there, mean that citizens need to think twice next time they stroll home after a night at the pub, climb a tree in a local park or question why a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Battles of Gettysburg and Antietam
¶ … battles of Gettysburg and Antietam to determine which was the turning point of the war. Both of these battles were decisive victories for the North. The North also wasted opportunities to totally crush the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Spanish Inquisition in Latin America
Largely, the origins of the Spanish Inquisition can be traced back to the Emperor Constantine of Rome. Christianity, which had within Constantine's lifetime been officially battled by the Roman state, was eventually…
Research Paper Doctorate
Life experiences, professional background, and multicultural counseling interests
I was born in Hong Kong. As a child, I had traveled to many counties throughout the world such as Thailand, Malaysia, Japan and the United States, but my visits had been to mostly to popular tourist destinations.
Paper Doctorate
Hunger Memory Hunger of Memory: Contradictions From
Hunger of Memory: Contradictions from Experience
Paper Undergraduate
Niccolo Machiavelli Was a Sixteenth
Niccolo Machiavelli was a sixteenth century political philosopher based in Italy, best known for his work "The Prince" ("Il Principe"). Machiavelli is considered even today as one of the most remarkable as well as…