Essay Topic Hub

Symbolism
Essays

1,154+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,154 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Symbolism is a literary device in which objects, characters, settings, or events carry meaning beyond their literal presence in a text. It is a central subject in literature courses at every level, from introductory composition to advanced literary criticism, because it asks students to move past surface reading and engage with how writers construct layers of meaning. Works ranging from August Wilson's Fences and James Baldwin's Sonny's Blues to Flannery O'Connor's Good Country People, John Steinbeck's The Chrysanthemums, and James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man all reward close symbolic analysis, making symbolism a topic that cuts across poetry, drama, and fiction alike.

Student papers on this topic approach symbolism from several directions. Many focus on a single work—Shirley Jackson's The Lottery, Tennessee Williams's The Glass Menagerie, or Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni's Clothes—and trace how specific symbols develop across a narrative to reinforce themes of death, family, identity, or transformation. Others place symbolic systems in broader cultural or religious contexts, drawing on frameworks such as Kabbalistic tradition or the Hebrew Bible to illuminate how inherited symbol systems shape literary meaning. Some papers take a comparative angle, examining how imagery and symbolism work together across poems like W. B. Yeats's The Gyres or Yusef Komunyakaa's Facing It.

A strong essay on symbolism begins with a focused, arguable thesis that connects a specific symbol to a larger thematic claim rather than simply cataloguing what symbols appear. Evidence drawn from close reading—precise quotations and attention to context—carries the most weight, since meaning depends on how and when a symbol appears. The most common pitfall is treating symbolism as fixed and universal; effective analysis instead shows how meaning is built through the particular choices a writer makes within a specific work.

Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
BP Organizational Behavior BP PLC Organizational Behavior
Imagine going to work for BP as an engineer to drill oil in the gulf. What would happen if a disaster occurred? Could the company hold up under pressure? How would management react to the situation?
Paper Undergraduate
Amadou Hampate Bâ's cultural and religious dialogue
The objective of this study is to examine how Amadou Hampate Ba uses stories as didactic tools on the mystical ways of the Tijanyya tradition. Amadou Hampate Ba was convinced that traditions could serve to assist…
Paper Doctorate
Hinduism: core beliefs and practices
¶ … Christianity and Islam, Hinduism is the third largest religion in the world, And, unlike Islam or Christianity, it does not have a single belief system, a central religious organization, did not have a single…
Paper Undergraduate
Frankenstein an Analysis of Mary
Mary Shelly Wrote the novel Frankenstein in the year 1817. Since its publication it has gripped the interest and imagination of readers throughout the world and is still being read and studied today.
Paper High School
Love: An Illusion Joyce\'s \"Araby\"
Joyce's "Araby" uses metaphor and symbolism to denote passage of the protagonist from dullness to optimism and then, to vanquishing of that light. This symbolism serves as background to Joyce's message that love is…
Paper High School
Christian Symbolism in \"The Old
Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea" is certainly one of the most complex novels produced by the American writer. The story involves several episodes, each of them focused on the fisherman as he interacts with…
Paper Undergraduate
Desire to Enjoy the Sexual
¶ … desire to enjoy the sexual act with his wife leads to the introduction of Jashoda as 'professional mother' to the Haldar infants, and liberates the Haldar women from at least one stage in the endless cycle of…
Paper Undergraduate
Pierre Bonnard's works and artistic style
Pierre Bonnard was born into a bourgeois family in 1867 in a village outside Paris. Although he received his law degree in 1888, Bonnard would go on to study art at Ecole des Arts Decoratifs in Paris.
Paper Undergraduate
Students\' Perceptions of Intercultural Contact
Does exposing students to a multicultural environment in a university context automatically make students more tolerant? Or must the university have a more active role in the creation of intercultural dialogue?
Paper Undergraduate
W.E.B. Dubois\' Largely Autobiographical Exploration
¶ … W.E.B. DuBois' largely autobiographical exploration of what it meant to be black in the United States in the period following the Civil War, The Souls of Black Folks, a major metaphor that appears with many shades…