Essay Topic Hub

Comedy
Essays

549+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Comedy is one of the oldest and most studied genres in literary and cultural history, examined across English literature, film studies, drama, and media courses. It encompasses a wide range of forms—from theatrical plays and narrative fiction to film and television—making it relevant in courses on genre theory, dramatic literature, and criticism. What makes comedy academically rich is its relationship to serious human concerns: love, death, character, and social tension are all refracted through humor, allowing writers and filmmakers to approach difficult subjects with distance and irony. Works like Shakespeare's Henry IV Part 1 and films such as Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful demonstrate how comedy operates as both entertainment and critique.

Student essays on this topic take several distinct approaches. Many papers engage in comparison and contrast, weighing comedy against tragedy to examine how the two genres define each other through character, plot structure, and audience response. Others perform close analysis of specific works—studying motifs, narrative elements, and dramatic technique in plays and films. Some papers adopt a cultural criticism angle, such as exploring whether comedy functions as a last frontier of sexism and examining its relationship to feminism. Film theory and criticism provide another framework, with essays analyzing how directors use humor to shape audience perception and emotional experience.

A strong essay on comedy establishes a focused thesis about how humor functions in a specific text or context rather than simply describing comic moments. Evidence drawn from character behavior, dramatic structure, and audience effect carries the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating comedy as inherently lighthearted, when the strongest arguments engage with the tension between humor and darker themes like death, power, or gender.

549 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Brodie the Broadsword
Brodie the Broadsword' is a play written by Alan Richardson, who is well-known for his numerous publications on various topics related to gender issues and issues of race, colonialism, and topics related to children.
Paper Undergraduate
Aristophanes, Cratinus & Eupolis: Old Athenian Comedy
Acharnians, Knights, and Clouds are three of the most revered works by Aristophanes. These works are of particular interest to this discourse because they have clear political and social nuances which affected the…
Essay Doctorate
Critical analysis of "The Importance of Being Earnest" by Oscar Wilde
This paper provides a critique of Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest." It gives a critical summary of the play and also examines the meaning of the comedy from the perspective of theme, characterization and plot. It explores the ideas contained with the very title of the play and shows how these connect to the text.
Paper Masters
Disciplines and Cultural Context of the Humanities
The letter was a response to one he got from the white priests, who were encouraging him to go to the court with the issue of racial segregation. King had been imprisoned following a peaceful parade held in Birmingham, to raise a voice against racism. However, he was in violation of the court order that forbade any kind of demonstrations in Birmingham. It was penned in April, 1963 and was meant to fight for the freedom of all humans to protest peacefully against any injustice (Vox, L. 2012). Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a philosopher and a priest by profession but he is known for his work as the leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.
Thesis Undergraduate
Historical biographical criticism in literary analysis
Playwright August Wilson won two Pulitzers in his illustrious career. In The Pittsburgh Cycle, Wilson wrote a series of plays each depicting a different decade in the lives of African-Americans living in the United…
Paper Undergraduate
My Final Film Critique
Eight page film paper on The Princess Bride, chosen as a representative of American cinema. Covers storytelling; acting; Cinematography; Editing; Sound; Style; and Directing. Impact of society on the film and vice versa; Genre; Overall textual themes. Establishes a coherent thesis statement. The body supports the thesis through an textual and analysis of the film and other relevant material. Refers to specific shots, scenes, characters, stylistic devices, and themes in the film.
Research Paper Doctorate
Amusement Parks in the American 1890\'s
In the years just before the dawn of the 20th Century, America was going through dramatic cultural, social, political and economic changes. The Industrial Revolution was reshaping the way Americans worked and played; an…
Paper Doctorate
English Literature Death in Venice - Cultural
Death in Venice - Cultural Criticism & Reader Response Criticism
Paper Undergraduate
Transformations of Literature: This Focus
This article provides a review of transformation of literature based on the play "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by William Shakespeare. This analysis begins with a brief summary of the events in the play that are geared towards the wedding of Theseus, the Duke of Athens and Hippolyta, the queen of Amazon. The review also examines the three major themes presented in the article in relation to their significance in the lives of students.
Paper Undergraduate
The politics of ideology in Brecht's Galileo
Louis Althusser (1918-90) was one of the foremost Marxist theorists in the Western world, and advocated an especially orthodox version of Marxism that was always close to the Communist Party line.