Essay Topic Hub

World War Ii
Essays

3,041+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

3,041 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

World War II stands as one of the most consequential events in modern history, making it a central subject across disciplines including history, political science, literature, and cultural studies. The conflict reshaped national borders, redefined international relations, and generated moral and political questions that scholars and students continue to examine. Its scope — spanning Europe, the Pacific, and beyond — means that courses ranging from world history to ethnic studies and economics find relevant angles within it. The war's intersection with nationalism, genocide, displacement, and postwar geopolitics gives it lasting academic weight that extends well beyond military history.

The papers gathered here reflect a wide range of approaches. Several focus on the experiences of specific groups, including Japanese American families during the war, Jewish women in Hitler's Germany, and Jewish resistance during the Holocaust. Others take a literary and cultural angle, analyzing works such as Farewell to Manzanar, The Tin Drum, and poetry like Janice Mirikitani's "Suicide Note" to explore how individuals processed wartime trauma. Comparative essays contrast World War I and World War II, while political analyses extend into postwar consequences such as the Arab-Israeli conflict and the Oslo Accords. Some papers examine how nationalism shaped wartime film propaganda.

A strong essay on World War II requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad summary of events. Evidence drawn from primary sources, historical case studies, or specific literary texts carries far more weight than general claims. Writers should connect their specific angle — whether cultural, political, or personal — back to larger historical forces. The most common pitfall is treating the war as a single unified story; successful essays instead isolate a precise aspect and develop it with concrete, well-sourced detail.

3,041 papers
Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Humanitarian intervention and contemporary security issues
Humanitarian intervention: When is it justified?
Paper Doctorate
Formation Dynamics and Developmental Outcomes. The First
¶ … formation dynamics and developmental outcomes. The first line in the chapter says that as the new millennium starts, the state is rising in both the public's and in scholarly imagination.
Essay Doctorate
Gravity's Rainbow and Other Cold War Literature and Film
¶ … Cold War dominated American culture, consciousness, politics and policy for most of the 20th century. Even after the fall of the Berlin Wall, which symbolized the fall of the Iron Curtain and therefore finale of the…
Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Military Operation: Raid at Cabanatuan
The ROF (Raid at Cabanatuan) is a military operation aimed to rescue American and Allied (POWs) prisoner of wars from the Japanese camp very close to Cabanatuan City in Philippines.
Paper Masters
Explaining Aging Using Development Theories
Development Theory: The Life-Trajectory of Kevin
Essay Doctorate
China and India Post-World War II
¶ … non-Western cultures, China and India, which were transformed by globalization after World War II. A description concerning the circumstances within each of these cultures both prior to and after the influence of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
"The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson
Literature that followed World War II in the United States tended towards the cynical, the depressive, and a sense of mortality that has not been as intense before the World War broke out for the first time.
Thesis Undergraduate
War and society: interactions and impacts
War has shown its ugly side many times throughout the ages. As people have seen through battles, the casualties can be devastating. People lose families, lose their livelihoods, lose their dignity, and lose their homes…
Thesis Undergraduate
Naval intelligence and espionage operations
¶ … Covert Navy Tactics and Strategies: Naval Intelligence
Paper Undergraduate
Post-Mortem on Gulf War I
While the second Iraq War was extremely mixed in its results, outcomes and process, the first one was much more successful. Indeed, it made presiding General Norman Schwarzkopf a national hero.