Essay Topic Hub

William Blake
Essays

98+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

William Blake was an eighteenth-century English poet and visual artist whose work sits at the intersection of literary studies, art history, and religious thought. His dual identity as both writer and painter makes him a uniquely rich subject for academic study, and he appears frequently in courses covering Romantic literature, poetry analysis, and the history of ideas. What makes Blake especially compelling to scholars is his sustained exploration of opposing states — innocence and experience — and the way his religious and philosophical views shaped every dimension of his creative output. His individual poems, from "The Lamb" to "London," serve as concentrated texts through which students can examine symbolism, tone, and argument simultaneously.

The papers written about Blake reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Comparative essays place his work alongside other poets and artists, including Langston Hughes, to examine how creative figures relate to their craft and social contexts. Close reading papers focus on individual poems such as "The Lamb," "The Tyger," and "London," unpacking their imagery and themes. Some essays take a thematic approach, tracing Blake's views on religion or the tension between innocence and experience across multiple works. Others apply formal analysis, identifying sensory and figurative language as interpretive tools. His visual art, including the painting Binding Satan from Heaven, also appears as evidence in arguments about his spiritual worldview.

A strong essay on Blake begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim about his genius or importance. Evidence drawn from specific lines, images, or visual details carries more weight than general summary. When comparing poems like "The Lamb" and "The Tyger," the most common pitfall is cataloguing differences without explaining what those contrasts reveal about a larger idea, so always connect observations back to a central interpretive claim.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) Was an American
A brief analysis of eight different poems written by Poe, Dickinson, Blake, Owen, Cummings, Thomas, and Silverstein. In each of the poems, a literary device was identified and it was demonstrated how one of the poems made use of the device. Devices included imagery, repetition, tone, style, metaphor, and theme.
Paper Doctorate
Work as a pilgrimage to identity
The world we life in today has the tendency to direct the individual towards a materialist approach on everyday life and experience. More and more often people are motivated in choosing their work by material and financial gain rather than by the inner satisfaction that work should bring about. "Crossing the Unknown Sea: Work As a Pilgrimage of Identity" by David Whyte provides an interesting and captivating description of the actual thrive that should stand as cornerstone in choosing the work we do, be it in everyday life or as lifetime experiencing, in achieving one's calling and in finding that inner satisfaction that needs to motivate our action. His view on the matter is that the work that we engage ourselves in represents the identity people project in life. However, that work should be the result of genuine motivation and meaningful choices rather than material gain.
Research Paper Doctorate
Eastern Mysticism and Magic in American Pop Culture
Eastern religion" - also alluded to in this paper as "Eastern Mysticism" and "mysticism" - and the occult, along with magic and its many off-shoots have had a considerable influence on American Pop Culture over the past…
Research Paper Doctorate
Stephen Crane\'s Maggie a Girl of the Streets
Stephen Crane's novella, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, was written during America's "Gilded Age" which was the era from the end of the Civil War to the turn of the Century. The name was given to the period by Mark…
Research Paper Doctorate
Critical comparison of poetry styles and techniques
¶ … life William Blake's poem the Lamb, defining it as the divinity of creation. Furthermore looking at Wildred Owen's poem In Dulce et Decorum Est, with an argument that its' message is one that contradicts the…
Case Study Doctorate
William Blake history and bibliography
William Blake was never fully appreciated in his own time but is still an influence on literary, political and theological analyses long after his death. While the amount of modern literary criticism that now exists…
Thesis Doctorate
William Blake history and bibliography
William Blake is usually classified with the Romantic movement in English literature -- which coalesced in the revolutionary climate of the late eighteenth century, and roughly spanned the period from 1780 to 1830.
Research Paper Doctorate
William Blake: life and works
William Blake was one of Britain's greatest poets. His long history of mental illness also makes him one of England's most colourful and interesting literary figures. He lived his life in poverty, in the company of his…
Research Paper Doctorate
Blake's Holy Thursday poems and their social commentary
Why and how does Blake create a distinction between innocence and experience in Holy Thursday?
Paper Masters
How Poets Used Imagery to Convey Deeper Ideas
Analysis of the use of imagery in Dylan Thomas's "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night," William Blake's "The Lamb" and "The Tyger" from Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. Analyzed concepts of death and rebellion in "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night" and themes of religion, innocence and experience, and good vs evil in Blake's "The Lamb" and "The Tyger"