Essay Topic Hub

Documentary
Essays

472+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Documentary film sits at the intersection of journalism, history, and cinematic art, making it a frequent subject of study in film studies, media studies, communications, and humanities courses. Unlike fictional narrative film, documentary claims a direct relationship with reality, which raises compelling academic questions about objectivity, representation, and the ethics of storytelling. This tension between truth and construction gives the genre its intellectual weight and invites students to examine how filmmakers shape a viewer's understanding of real events, real people, and real social issues.

The papers collected here reflect a wide range of approaches to documentary study. Some take a reaction or response format, engaging directly with specific films such as Eyes on the Prize Part 2, Man on Wire, Outfoxed, and Paris Is Burning to analyze how each documentary frames its subject. Others pursue broader thematic or evaluative analysis, looking at how films like Beyond Beats and Rhymes address social issues around identity and culture. A number of papers also blur the line between documentary and dramatization, examining works like the World Trade Center film or Valkyrie to question historical accuracy and cinematic interpretation.

A strong essay on documentary begins with a clear, arguable claim about how a film constructs meaning rather than simply summarizing its content. Evidence drawn from specific scenes, editorial choices, framing, and narration carries the most weight. One common pitfall to avoid is treating a documentary as a neutral record of facts; the most rigorous essays treat every filmmaking decision as deliberate and worth interrogating.

472 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Gasland the Planet\'s Major Resources Are Continually
The planet's major resources are continually threatened by industry and business. Among them, water has become such a priced commodity that finding areas with uncontaminated drinking water is slowly becoming a feat.
Paper Undergraduate
North Korea's Political Dynasty: A Review of Kimjongilia
As a historical documentary, a significant portion of the content consists of interviews, necessarily. A documentary full of "talking heads," (a term used in the film and media industries to indicate what is only on the screen i.e. people talking) is boring and loses the audience almost immediately. Variety keeps documentaries interesting no matter how compelling the subject matter, as is the case of the subject matter of "Kimjongilia."
Essay Undergraduate
Ideas of Malcolm X And Other African-American Leaders
This is a six page paper that explores the ideas of Malcolm X and other African American leaders. Emphasis is on Malcolm X, and quotes from the autobiography are offered. However, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. DuBois, and Martin Luther King Jr are also compared and contrasted with Malcolm X. Issues such as historical context are taken into account during the discussion.
Research Paper Undergraduate
House of Cards Analysis
This is based on a video analysis that was done on the economic status in USA and the world at large and was called House of Cards. It looks at how ethics or lack of it had a play in the economic breakdown, also looks at planning problems as well as the strategies that the documentary depicted as wanting.
Research Paper Doctorate
Evidence Criminal Evidence in Order
In order to bring an accused person into Court, there must be evidence. Without evidence there can be no trial. Criminal evidence can be (1) physical and documentary; (2) testimony of witnesses, or (3) the accused…
Paper Undergraduate
War Without Mercy Race and Power in the Pacific War by John Dower
John W. Dower is a professor of Japanese history who received his Ph.D. In History and Far Eastern Languages from Harvard University in 1972 and has written extensively about popular culture in his scholarly work on…
Paper Doctorate
Documentary filmmaking: knowing when to stop recording
When should a person who is filming something stop and render aid? That is a question that has no easy answer. Addressed here are questions about documentarians and whether they should put down the camera and help the person who is being filmed. It would seem like an easy answer, but there are many issues to be addressed and there are differing opinions on the responsibilities of these filmmakers.
Paper Doctorate
Salvador Dawning (2011): Race, Inequality, and the Black Movement in Brazil
Salvador Dawning is a 2011 film that attempts to place emphasis on the racial divide in Brazil. In the film, the Movimento Negro (Black Movement) is examined to demonstrate their quest for equal rights.
Paper High School
Krump dancing: history, culture, and movement
This paper is an informative essay about the practice of krump dancing, an urban form of hip-hop clowning that has taken on spiritual significance in the eyes of many of its fans. Krumping began at children's birthday parties, but is now often the subject of informal street competitions. It blends theatrical violence and clowning and many of its moves have roots in African dance traditions.
Research Paper Doctorate
Burden of dreams: a documentary analysis
In 1979, German filmmaker Werner Herzog set out to produce a movie about a rubber baron who dreamed of bringing the opera to the jungles of South America. Herzog's film, which would be titled Fitzcarraldo after the…