398+ paper examples, study guides & outlines
Humor as a subject of academic study appears across English courses in composition, rhetoric, and literature. Students write about it because humor is both a literary mode and a rhetorical strategy — a deliberate craft choice that shapes how readers receive an argument or story. Works like Aristophanes' Lysistrata and Virgil's Aeneid demonstrate that comic and satirical registers have been central to serious writing for centuries, and contemporary texts continue that tradition. Understanding how humor functions helps students analyze tone, audience awareness, and the relationship between writer and reader more precisely than surface-level reading allows.
The papers archived here approach humor from several directions. Some perform rhetorical analysis, examining how writers deploy comic techniques to persuade or engage — including analyses of speeches, advertisements, and essays such as Amy Tan's "Mother Tongue." Others take a literary approach, contrasting texts or reading works like In a Sunburned Country to consider how a humorous voice shapes nonfiction narrative. Still others treat humor as a practical mode, studying or producing humorous speeches and evaluating what makes writing feel lively and interesting to a reader. A smaller set of papers explores humor in relation to broader cultural or social topics, from media to personal experience.
A strong essay on humor grounds its claims in specific textual evidence — particular word choices, structural decisions, or rhetorical techniques — rather than simply asserting that something is funny. A well-scoped thesis identifies which type of humor is at work and explains what effect it produces on the reader. The most common pitfall is treating humor as decoration rather than as argument, which causes analysis to stay shallow. Humor almost always serves a purpose beyond entertainment, and strong essays pursue that purpose directly.