Essay Topic Hub

Structuralism
Essays

89+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

89 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Structuralism is an intellectual framework concerned with how meaning arises not from isolated elements but from the relationships and differences between them within larger systems. It appears across multiple disciplines, making it a recurring subject in social science, psychology, literary studies, linguistics, and anthropology courses. Students engage with it because it offers a systematic way to analyze how knowledge, language, and culture are organized, and because its influence on later theoretical movements — including post-structuralism — makes it foundational to understanding modern humanistic and social inquiry. Thinkers such as Eliade and Lévi-Strauss, both named in student work on this topic, represent how structuralist thinking has been applied to mythology, religion, and cultural analysis.

The papers archived on this topic take a notably varied set of approaches. Comparative essays place structuralism alongside functionalism and behaviorism to trace distinctions in psychological theory, while historically oriented work traces its role in the evolution of cognitive psychology and sociological theory into the twenty-first century. Applied analyses examine structuralism through specific Greek myths, literary texts, and film, including post-structuralist extensions into cinema. Other papers use structuralist or related theoretical lenses to address identity construction, generational poverty, and representation in special education, demonstrating how broadly the framework can be deployed.

A strong essay on structuralism grounds its thesis in a clear account of what structures are being analyzed and what relationships within those structures produce meaning. Evidence drawn from specific texts, myths, films, or social phenomena tends to carry more weight than abstract summary alone. The most common pitfall is conflating structuralism with post-structuralism; distinguishing the two precisely, rather than treating them as interchangeable, signals genuine command of the theoretical terrain.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Gender as a cultural construction
Subculture therefore refers to social groups that are organized around shared/common practices and interests. The term has often been used in positioning certain specific social groups as well as the study of such kinds of groups. In this paper, we compare and contrast and analyze the works of Geertz (2000) and Hebrige (1979) on the concept of subculture.
Paper Doctorate
Structuralism and Literature
Structuralism and Stetson's "The Yellow Wallpaper"
Essay Doctorate
Analyzing the Mind and Body Problem
Mind/Body Dualism: Compare/contrast Cartesian Rationalism and at least one version of Empiricism.
Paper Undergraduate
90s Popular Culture and Effects on American Self Identity Formation
Popular culture is the main force in America; it reaches our classrooms, cars and, even homes and influences what people think, watch, listen to, wear, and buy. Popular culture can be quite addictive, annoying,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
International relations: theories, practices, and global governance
¶ … NGO is a non-governmental organization, while an IGO is an intergovernmental organization. The latter is typically created between states. Trade agreements often create IGOs as enforcement mechanisms, for example.
Paper Undergraduate
Qualitative Analysis Methodology Phenomenology
The way we think about a phenomenon has greatly and definitely been influenced by phenomenology which is a school of philosophy with wide spread recognition. Phenomenology which has its origins in European disciplines…
Essay Doctorate
W.E.B. Du Bois and Kwame Anthony Appiah on racial identity
W.E.B. Du Bois was a premier American sociologist, whose contributions to social theory strengthen the philosophies of Marx, Weber, and Durkheim. Du Bois studied formally in America and Germany, where Du Bois developed…
Paper Undergraduate
Irony in the Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield
Tolstoy states that every happy family is the same (Tolstoy 1). He says this because happiness is the effect of a life well lived and not of any other cause, which is also the philosophy of Plato (Plato 47).
Essay Doctorate
Two First Schools of Psychology
The structuralist/functionalist debate in the field of psychology focuses on the framework that psychological approaches should take. In the pioneer days of psychology, scholars argued whether one should take a…
Paper Doctorate
Criticism of the Neoclassical Theory: Comparative Economics
Economics: Neoclassical, Keynesian, And Marxian Theories