Essay Topic Hub

Commentary
Essays

1,077+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,077 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Commentary, as an academic subject within communications, refers to the practice of interpreting, analyzing, and responding to texts, events, cultural artifacts, and social phenomena. It appears across disciplines including literature, religious studies, media studies, philosophy, and sociology. What makes commentary academically compelling is its dual nature: it is both a form of communication itself and a method for examining how meaning is made and shared. Students engage with commentary to understand how societies reflect on their own values, power structures, and lived experiences, and to develop their own capacity for structured critical thought.

The papers archived under this topic approach commentary from a wide range of angles. Literary analysis appears in work on texts such as Paradise Lost and Sartor Resartus, where writers examine how authors comment on society, spiritual life, and human experience. Cultural and social commentary surfaces in examinations of contemporary topics like Inuit youth identity and customer satisfaction, as well as philosophical frameworks such as deontological and consequentialist ethics. Film, religion, and procedural subjects also feature, suggesting that students use commentary as both a lens and a genre across very different areas of inquiry.

A strong essay on commentary should establish a clear position on what the commentary being examined reveals — about power, society, or human experience — rather than simply summarizing the source material. Evidence drawn from close reading, historical context, or cultural analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating commentary as neutral observation; effective essays acknowledge that all commentary reflects particular perspectives and is shaped by the conditions in which it is produced.

1,077 papers
Sort by:
Paper Masters
Exodus Faith Change and Learning
Change and Learning on the Road: Developing New Views of the Person and of God in Exodus
Paper Doctorate
Africa Comparative Review Comparative Book
Fanon's aim in Black Skin, White Masks is to elaborate the features of psychic alienation experienced within the African man in the context of European colonialism, along with the mechanisms by which such alienation…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Oedipus Rex
Sophocles' work is at once the paragon of the Greek classical tragedy, one of the essential myths of mankind and a great esthetic achievement. Furthermore, the too well-known plot has been made by Freud into a landmark…
Paper Undergraduate
Principles of hermeneutics in John 12:1-8
In this paper, we are going to be looking at how hermeneutics is used to provide greater understanding of theological ideas. This will be accomplished by focusing on John 12: 1- 8. During this process, there will be an emphasis on a number of areas to include: the social setting of the text, the author's point of view, the genre of the writing, the usage of words, the echoes of other passages, the textual background, the intended audience and the use of folklore. Once this takes place, is when we can see how these ideas are used to instill a host of ideas upon the reader.
Paper Undergraduate
IFRS versus GAAP approaches to impairment loss
In any industry, it is important to keep up-to-date with the ongoing changes in other firms, consumer trends, and other factors that affect the way business in the industry is conducted.
Paper Undergraduate
Interdisciplinary Approaches to Learning) How
¶ … Interdisciplinary Approaches to Learning)
Paper Undergraduate
Feminism and Identity in Asian-Diasporic Literature and Film
Views of Feminism in Asian-Identified Women
Paper Doctorate
Gender Inequality in Post-Colonial Literature: Nervous Conditions
Gender Inequality in Post-Colonial Literature
Paper Masters
Compare and Contrast Native Americans and the Blues from Sherman Alexie Book Reservation Blues
This essay explores the relationship between Native American identity and the blues in Sherman Alexie's novel Reservation Blues. The blues provide a shared language for the expression of Native and African American experiences, and the novel explores how this shared language can lead to a confrontation with the past. By charting how the blues influence the characters and spaces of the novel, one is able to see how the relationships between Native, African, and white Americans are more complex and cross-cultural than one might previously expect.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Language and Simulation in Nabokov's Lolita
Vladimir Nabokov's celebrated novel Lolita is a linguistic masterpiece which ranges its author in the same line with other geniuses, such as James Joyce or Thomas Pynchon. Admittedly, Nabokov's writings are situated on…