Essay Topic Hub

Marriage
Essays

4,293+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

4,293 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Marriage is one of the most examined institutions in Family Science, appearing in sociology, psychology, gender studies, and literature courses alike. Its academic interest lies in how it sits at the intersection of personal relationships and broader social structures — shaped by law, culture, religion, and economics simultaneously. Papers on this topic often engage with contested questions about what marriage is for, who it should include, and how it shapes individual development across the life course. Works like Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice and Dryden's Marriage a la Mode provide literary windows into how expectations around marriage have evolved, while frameworks like Daniel Levinson's Stage Theory offer developmental lenses for understanding how marriage fits into adult life stages.

The papers archived here take a wide range of approaches. Argumentative and persuasive writing dominates, particularly around gay marriage, where writers construct policy-based and rights-based cases both for and against government recognition. Other papers take a practical angle, exploring what makes marriages succeed or fail, including the long-term effects of divorce on adult children. Comparative approaches appear in analyses of different marriage preparation programs, while literary and feminist analyses examine how marriage has functioned as a social institution that historically constrains women.

A strong essay on marriage needs a focused, debatable thesis rather than a broad survey of the topic. Evidence drawn from developmental psychology, sociological research, or close textual analysis tends to carry the most weight depending on the course context. The most common pitfall is conflating personal opinion with argument — especially on contested topics like same-sex marriage — without grounding claims in credible frameworks or evidence.

4,293 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Crimes and Misdemeanors in Woody Allen\'s Crimes
In Woody Allen's Crimes and Misdemeanors, most characters are consumed by questions of love and morality and the places where the two meet.
Research Paper Doctorate
Seventeenth century novel characteristics and themes
¶ … Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, by John Cleland (commonly known as "Fanny Hill"). Specifically, it will answer the question, "is Fanny Hill an unrepentant woman or a contrite woman?
Research Paper Doctorate
History concepts and contexts
¶ … Unruly Women: The Politics of Social and Sexual Control in the Old South," by Victoria E. Bynum. Specifically, it will look at why I found the book to be interesting and valuable for research on how women lived in…
Paper Masters
Hypotheticals Brian Short v. State of Florida
Is it legal for the State of Florida to prohibit the marriage of two very short people to each other, using the rationale that two short people are likely to produce short children and short children are less likely to…
Paper Masters
Gabriel: characteristics, significance, and cultural context
¶ … James Joyce's "The Dead," the first impression of a joyful holiday gathering of well off friends and family gives the wrong impression about a group of people that are living a routine of unfulfilling lives.
Research Paper Doctorate
The American dream and its cultural significance
Although written and filmed a century apart, Kate Chopin's novel, "The Awakening," and the movie "Thelma and Louis" possess the same core theme of feminism at odds with the norms of society.
Research Paper Doctorate
The corrections: narrative structure and literary analysis
What made correction possible also doomed it." (Franzen, 2002, 278)
Research Paper Doctorate
Book of Ruth Ruth, and God\'s Apparent
The Old Testament is filled with stories of mighty works between God and man. In supernatural ways, god seem intimately involves with his creation in order to reveal himself in their lives, and weave Himself into their…
Research Paper Doctorate
Bram Stoker's Dracula: Literary analysis and themes
Bram Stoker's masterwork and greatest novel, Dracula, has been and remains one of the most culturally pervasive novelistic tropes of the last 100 years. Indeed, in multiple film versions as well as in the novel and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Everyday Use by Alice Walker the Thematic
The thematic richness of "Everyday Use" is made possible by the perceptive, and flexible voice of the first-person narrator. It is the mother's viewpoint that permits the reader to understand both Dee and Maggie.