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

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.

1,154 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Aristophanes fragments and their literary significance
¶ … Aristophanic invective against a rival dramatist: the fragment from the lost Lemnian Women included in Henderson's edition as number 382, attested to in two separate ancient sources (suggesting it was considered a…
Paper Undergraduate
Unit 3 topic overview and key concepts
This paper is a discussion of Willa Cather's Paul's Case. It examines the meanings of "theater" and "Romance" in Cather's characterization of Paul. Explaining the why Cather capitalize the word Romance. The paper explains the relationship between theater and Romance for Paul as well as investigating the effect of Cather's emphasis "Perhaps it was because, in Paul's world, the natural nearly always wore the guise of ugliness, that a certain element of artificiality, seemed to him necessary in beauty"
Research Paper Doctorate
Foils in Crime and Punishment: Razumikhin and Raskolnikov
Razumikhin Serves as Raskolonikov's Foil In Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime And Punishment; However, There Are Other Foils Present In The Book
Paper High School
Reading response to a poem
The purpose of literature is for the author to invoke and emotional reaction by the audience reading that poem. Some works are designed to inspire joy and others are written in the hopes of inspiring fear or longing or…
Paper Undergraduate
Room of One\'s Own by Virginia Woolf Found in the Seagull Reader
This is a three page paper. It is about Virginia Woolf, and her essay "A Room of One's Own." This essay focuses mainly on Woolf's rhetorical strategies and the literary devices that she uses to convey her central thesis about the way women have been objectified and silenced by patriarchy. Woolf uses irony, symbolism, and Aristotelian rhetorical strategies to achieve her goal.
Thesis Doctorate
William Blake history and bibliography
William Blake is usually classified with the Romantic movement in English literature -- which coalesced in the revolutionary climate of the late eighteenth century, and roughly spanned the period from 1780 to 1830.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Play Trifles by Susan Glaspell
The title of Susan Glaspell's drama Trifles indicates that it will deal with seemingly small matters: as Mrs. Hale says of the pivotal prop in the stage-play -- "Wouldn't they just laugh?
Paper Doctorate
Alfred Hitchcock Is One of the Most
An analysis of the influence of German Expressionism, Soviet Constructivism, and Griersonian Documentary Realism on Alfred Hitchcock's films. Films that were analyzed in these respects are The 39 Steps and The Lady Vanishes. Hitchcock used German Expressionism to determine what was seen on screen, Constructivism to determine how it was seen, and Griersonian Realism to elements the audience could relate to, thus allowing them to engage in the suspense on a personal level.
Paper High School
Story analysis and literary interpretation
The paper is about the theme of social skills and socialization with respect to Tennessee Williams' famous play, "The Glass Menagerie." The paper focuses primarily upon the Wingfield family: Tom, Laura, and Amanda, with some reference to Jim O'Connor. The paper argues that each character has a social problem or social disorder that prevents him/her from interacting with the real world and having a happy life.
Research Paper Doctorate
Judas Iscariot: historical figure and biblical narrative
Judas Iscariot (Outline after Reference Page)