Essay Topic Hub

Ceremony
Essays

373+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Ceremony as an academic subject appears across disciplines including anthropology, religious studies, cultural studies, and literature. Students encounter it in courses that examine how human communities mark meaning through structured ritual, whether in everyday social life or major life transitions. What makes ceremony academically compelling is its dual nature: it operates as both a deeply personal experience for individuals and families and a collective expression of cultural identity. Papers in this area often engage with the significance of ceremonial forms across vastly different societies, exploring how ceremonies organize social relationships, reinforce values, and connect generations. Works like Leslie Silko's 1977 novel Ceremony bring these questions into literary analysis, while ethnographic traditions applied to groups such as the Mbuti or the Enga people ground the subject in fieldwork and primary cultural research.

The papers gathered here approach ceremony from several angles. Comparative analysis is common, as seen in work examining the similarities and differences between a Kinaaldá and a Quinceañera—two coming-of-age ceremonies rooted in distinct cultural traditions. Historical and cultural overviews appear as well, covering topics like world music culture and Egyptian funerary texts. Other papers take a focused case-study approach, looking at same-sex marriage, cultural wedding practices, or Native American expressive culture to examine how ceremony functions within specific communities and changing social contexts.

A strong essay on ceremony builds a clear thesis about what a specific ceremonial form reveals—about identity, power, family, or cultural continuity—rather than simply describing its steps. Evidence drawn from ethnographies, primary texts, or close literary analysis carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating ceremony as mere tradition without analyzing its living significance for the individuals and communities who practice it.

373 papers
Sort by:
Paper Masters
Construction of a Collective Memory Between Jewish
Assmann (2001) writes that sociologist Maurice Halbwachs and Aby Warburg, art historian developed two theories of "collective or social memory." (p.125) Assmann states of collective or social memory that the "…specific character that a person derives from belonging to a distinct society and culture is not seen to maintain itself for generations as a result of phylogenetic evolution, but rather as a result of socialization and customs." (2001, p.125) The cultural survival of this group or type of what Assmann refers to as a "pseudo-species" is stated to be a "function of cultural memory." (2001, p.125) This study examines the construction of a collective cultural memory in Turkey by present day Jewish and Islamic Turks.
Essay Doctorate
Competing Ethical Claims: Need, Egoism, and Moral Worth
The competing ethical claims regarding the hiring of the three workers are as follows: one is assumed to be more in need because of an objective claim of financial hardship (Dinu); another subjectively feels more…
Research Paper Doctorate
Civilization of the High Middle Ages
It is said that the University of Oxford was not created, that rather it emerged. Universities in general, and the University of Oxford in particular, are among one of the many contributions of Medieval civilization to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Man Who Was Not Shakespeare: Christopher Marlowe
The Comedic and Tragic Life of Christopher Marlowe
Paper Doctorate
Three Pronged Symbolic System of the Totem Pole Potlatch and Tamawanas Dance
This essay has to do with how the Native American people of the Pacific Northwest conducted sacred ceremonies and what they meant to the people. Potlatch is a festival much like Christmas, but the gifts exchanged are meant as a redistribution of wealth. The totem poles are specific to people and tribes, and the Tamanawa is a sacred dance. All of these work together to form the sacred potlatch which was banned during the 1880's but returned in the 1950's.
Essay Doctorate
Ahmad Tea Assessment Briefing Document 2012/2013 History
Ahmad Tea Assessment: Briefing Document 2012/2013
Paper Doctorate
History and Impact of Soccer in Brazil
Imagine going to the country of Brazil, but before going one studies the history and impact of soccer. The culture is influenced and the people strive to either participate or cheer on the team.
Thesis High School
Chinese Religions and Judaism
There are several major religions in the world and in different parts of the world the religions are quite diverse. In China, two major religions are Taoism and Confucianism, while in the West one of the oldest…
Research Paper Doctorate
The American landscape in Frost's poetry
Between the years of 1912 and 1914 the entire temper of the American arts changed. America's cultural coming-of-age occurred and writing in the U.S. moved from a period entitled traditional to modernized.
Research Paper Doctorate
Courtly love in medieval literature and culture
Courtly love is, in general form, a structured form of male / female interaction which was infused with a poetic, heroic, romantic idealism about the virtue of both the man and the woman.