Essay Topic Hub

Narrative
Essays

2,634+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,634 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

 

A narrative essay is an essay written about a personal experience, usually from the first person perspective.  Because narrative essays are written about personal experiences and from a personal perspective, they can cover a wide range of topic.  They can also be difficult for a student to tackle, because individual experience plays such a critical role in the narrative essay.  We offer several narrative essay examples for people looking to familiarize themselves with the format.  Each of these essays provides a step-by-step tutorial for students who are new to the genre, from the topic to outlines of the work and even a list of resources.  

2,634 papers
Sort by:
Essay Masters
Comparative analysis of writing styles in Gilman, Fitzgerald, and Baldwin
Over the course of the late 19th and early 20th century, American literature began to turn inward. Instead of looking to outer manifestations of the human character, American authors began to use interior monologues as…
Essay Doctorate
An explication of the Lilies Landsford Canal poem
An explication of Susan Ludvigson's "The Lilies of Landsford Canal." Analysis includes how Ludvigson contemplates the narrator's mortality and how it compares to nature. Also analyzed are the role that literary devices such as imagery, allusion, personification, and simile play in this contemplation. The narrator explores how nature and man cannot coexist without destroying each other.
Paper Doctorate
Anne Moody's Coming of Age in Mississippi and Civil Rights
This essay is an analysis of Anne Moody's book Coming of Age in Mississippi, from 1968. The essay compares Moody's analysis with the writings of historians. The essay talks about how Moody's experiences add to the historiography, which tends to whitewash the situation and focus only on the triumph and joy but not on the real factors that failed to be addressed by the movement.
Paper Doctorate
Marijuana Shouldn't Be Legalized
Introduction Physical Health Concerns According to a Harvard University Law School document, it would be "…fallacious to conclude that because the chemicals in marijuana have been found to present fewer dangers…" than cocaine, heroin, alcohol and tobacco, that the recreational use of marijuana "is safe" (Harvard). In fact, even though many states authorize the use of cannabis for medical purposes (for AIDS sufferers and for those experiencing harmful side effects from cancer chemotherapy and glaucoma), marijuana has "potentially dangerous side effects" (Harvard). Those "dangerous [physical] side effects" include: a) damage to cells in the bronchial passages that could cause chronic bronchitis; b) a decrease in the ability of the body's immune cells to "fight off fungi, bacteria, and tumor cells"; c) the possibility of getting "pulmonary infections and respiratory cancer"; and d) since one joint of powerful cannabis has "four times more tar than a cigarette," lungs are exposed to the same dangers that cigarettes create (Harvard).
Paper Undergraduate
Japanese Manga or Anime
The paper is a two part endeavor. On the one hand, it is a scene analysis from the film Paprika. (2006) On the other hand, the paper is an exploration and explanation of themes from Japanese culture from the course. The paper analyzes the scene as a means to explain and locate prevalent themes and symbols of contemporary Japanese culture.
Paper Doctorate
Films as Expressions of a Society\'s Values
The paper consists of two outlines for separate, yet related topics connecting aspects of culture demonstrated in film. The paper takes a series of films from the United States and from Italy. Two theses are argued regarding the similarities and differences in each country's respective values and the topic of the paper, which are the glamorization of criminal life and non-normative love relationships.
Paper Doctorate
Compare and Contrast Dr. Larry Crabb\'s Book Effective Biblical Counseling
Bible Counseling Part ONE: Goal of Christian Counseling Dr. Larry Crabb sees human problems through two lenses: the first category involves problems that result from "…natural or physical causes" (things the individual has little or no control over). Examples of those kinds of problems include learning disabilities, a chemical imbalance within the person, and other issues that result from "perceptual dysfunctions." Crabb's goal is to fill the basic needs of a person, and under Christian counseling he feels the basic need is for "personal worth," which can be satisfied through two important inputs. One is a kind of "longing for significance" – that is, the person longs for a purpose, for importance, for a meaningful job that has a positive impact. The other is to have security through being accepted (p. 2).
Paper Undergraduate
Night on Earth by Jim
Night on Earth by Jim Jarmusch is a postmodern film which is told from a multiplicity of perspectives. The postmodernism aesthetic suggests that there is no single, unified truth, but rather only fragments or different…
Paper Doctorate
Crash: causes, impacts, and prevention strategies
Crash is a 2004 film by Paul Haggis that examines how issues of race and social class intersect and the impact individual perspectives have on their behaviors and attitudes. The film features an all-star cast that…
Paper Undergraduate
Summary and overview of key concepts
This is a four page paper. The first two pages are about Vladimir Nabokov's autobiography "Speak, Memory" and discusses only the first three chapters. The autobiography is untraditional. Nabokov begins with very metaphysical and mystical terminologies about time and darkness before discussing the details of his life. Charles Simic does something similar in his poem about his mother, which is the second part of this essay.