Essay Topic Hub

Science Fiction
Essays

257+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

257 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Science fiction is a genre that uses speculative premises — advanced technology, alien worlds, dystopian societies, and post-human futures — to examine fundamental questions about what it means to be human. It appears across literature, cultural studies, and media courses, and it attracts serious academic attention because it functions as social criticism dressed in imaginative clothing. Works like Ursula K. Le Guin's narratives, Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, William Gibson's Neuromancer, and Margaret Atwood's fiction give students rich primary texts in which technology, gender, identity, and power are not background details but the central argument of the work itself.

Student essays on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on character analysis, using figures from specific novels to explore themes of identity and humanity. Others are comparative, placing authors like Bellamy and Atwood side by side to trace how the genre has engaged with social reform across different eras. Narrative craft is another common angle, particularly how point of view shapes a reader's relationship to speculative worlds. Still others approach science fiction through genre theory, examining where the boundaries between fantasy and science fiction fall and why those distinctions matter critically.

A strong essay grounds its argument in close textual reading rather than broad generalizations about the genre. The most persuasive papers identify a specific tension — between nature and technology, or between individual ability and social control — and trace it carefully through the text. A common pitfall is treating science fiction as pure entertainment and neglecting how its speculative elements function as deliberate commentary on real human societies.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Baule Seated Male: African Cultural Artifact Analysis
In this paper, we are going to be studying the impact of African culture on modern art. This will be accomplished by focusing on: Seated Male from Côte d'Ivoire – Baule. Once this takes place, is when we provide specific ideas as to how this is influencing modern art and the ideas that are utilized from the past.
Research Paper Doctorate
Cloning in 1997, When the World First
In 1997, when the world first heard about Dolly the sheep, the first mammal to be cloned from an adult, the possibility of cloning a human moved from science fiction into the realm of reality.
Paper Doctorate
Alphaville Analysis of Godard\'s Alphaville French New
A formal analysis of Jean-Luc Godard's Alphaville. Film is analyzed in respect to French New Wave cinema. Analysis of the tenets of new wave is undertaken. Also argument is made that Alphaville is a precursor to contemporary films such as Blade Runner due to its hybridization of genres and themes.
Research Paper Doctorate
Artist in Cultural Phenomenon in Science Fiction
This essay discusses with regard to science fiction as a concept that is often regarded by artists concerned in mathematics. The paper focuses of Darren Aronofsky's 1998 motion picture Pi. By relating to how the director attempted to display the connection between a seemingly impossible number and the universe, the essay attempts to emphasize the importance that mathematics in general plays as the key to finding the universe's secrets
Paper Doctorate
Review of Food wars and culinary competition narratives
Walden Bello's book The Food Wars is not a meaty book in terms of length, but it covers an issue all of us are and should be concerned with: food. Bello is certainly qualified to discuss this topic. He has a background in sociology and is currently a professor of that discipline at the University of the Philippines. With a Harvard education to his credit, as well as authorship of several other well-received books and scholarly essays, Bello knows what he is talking about. In addition, he is deeply passionate about his topic, and this comes through clearly on these pages. He discusses questions that affect all of us deeply regarding food issues, particularly in terms of the political and economic aspects of it and how these issues affect all of us globally.
Paper Masters
Designer Babies the Idea of the Designer
The idea of the designer baby used to be an idea that belonged squarely in the field of science fiction. Choosing characteristics of offspring from gender to appearance was something out of Star Trek.
Essay Undergraduate
Et the Extra Terrestrial
"E.T., the Extra-Terrestrial" has entered the pantheon of American pop culture in such a way that any film critic approaching it has to declare his or her bias up front: it is as hard to be objective about "E.T." As it…
Paper Masters
Jurassic Park
The famous 1991 novel, Jurassic Park, is based on the subject of a wildlife preserve for dinosaurs. The renowned writer of this novel, Michael Crichton, hoisted the conventional phantom of the revivification of species that have been wiped out from the face of the earth by using conserving DNA samples ("'Jurassic Park' 20 Years" C10). The uncontrolled genetic engineering produced outcomes that were not the concern of just the scientists in the novel but are the concern of the whole human civilization (Sharp 507). Crichton was able to craft a vibrantly dramatic action-adventure story with the Jurassic
Essay Undergraduate
Magic Realism the Fantastic
Literature has endured a plethora of movements that have been used to both expand the literary base and try to explain a specific culture or set of cultures. For novels, it has been said that there are a very few plots…
Research Paper Doctorate
Science Fiction in Multicultural America Black Speculative Fiction
Samuel R. Delany's novel, Tales of Neveryon depicts a society where the monetary system is highly eroticized. Slavery is eroticized, and human sexuality becomes a commodity that can be bought and sold with the purchase…