Essay Topic Hub

Vietnam War
Essays

828+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

The Vietnam War stands as one of the most contested and consequential conflicts in modern American history, making it a central subject in courses covering twentieth-century history, political science, military studies, and American literature. The war raises durable academic questions about the limits of military power, the role of government decision-making, and the relationship between foreign policy and domestic dissent. Key flashpoints such as the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution and its debate in the U.S. Senate draw sustained scholarly attention, as do broader questions about Vietnamese history in the twentieth century and America's place within it.

Student papers on this topic approach the war from several distinct angles. Literary analysis is prominent, with Tim O'Brien's works — particularly The Things They Carried and Going After Cacciato — examined for how fiction captures the soldier's experience, while Michael Herr's Dispatches receives attention as a work of war journalism. Historical and policy-oriented essays explore specific programs such as the Phoenix Program, the dynamics of North versus South, and lessons drawn from the American military experience. Some papers extend outward to allied involvement, including the Australian Defence Force, or connect the war to the broader social upheavals of the 1960s, including student unrest.

A strong essay on the Vietnam War benefits from a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad narrative summary of events. Evidence drawn from primary sources — congressional debates, military reports, or literary texts — carries more analytical weight than general claims about the war's outcome. The most common pitfall is treating "lessons learned" as self-evident; a convincing essay specifies which actors, decisions, or conditions produced those lessons and why they matter.

Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Lessons From Vietnam the Concept of Cross-Cultural
Many of the diplomatic and cultural issues surrounding the Vietnam Conflict were a result of a Cold War mentality. The Cold War, not really a war, but more a preparation for conflict, was the tensions between the USSR and Allies (Warsaw Pact) and the US and Allies (NATO). One side held that America was economically and militarily aggressive after World War II.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Boot\'s Book, the Savage Wars
¶ … Boot's book, the Savage Wars of Peace: Small Wars and the Rise of American Power, adopts the topic of a handful of recent works focusing upon the oftentimes overlooked conflicts in American history.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Nixon\'s \"The Great Silent Majority\"
On November 3, 1969, then President Richard Nixon gave one of his most infamous speeches as a response to the growing uproar about America's involvement in Vietnam. Much to the dismay of voters and soldiers everywhere,…
Paper High School
War Drugs Drug Use, Addiction
During the mid to late 1960s, the movement of radical activism would become the most apparent demonstration of crisis in the United States, filling America's streets increasingly throughout the 1960s with civil…
Essay Doctorate
Military lessons learned from historical conflicts
Military Lessons Learned From Vietnam: Achieving Professionalism in Nursing
Paper Undergraduate
20th century United States foreign policy
As President Harry Truman faces the Russian missile crisis in Venezuela, the situation in the states is one of cautious alert. President Truman is known for his hard line position when it comes to the Russians (Brown,…
Paper Undergraduate
Life coaching: principles and practice
The goal for all blind skiers is more freedom.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Illegal Immigration it Has Been
It has been pointed out many times that the United States is a nation of immigrations, with only the Native American population having been here long enough to lay claim to be native to the land.
Paper Masters
Winning Is the Only Thing -- Book
Roberts, R. And Olson, J. (1989). Winning is the Only Thing- Sports in America Since
Research Paper Undergraduate
African-American Soldiers in Vietnam Mister
Send my son to Vietnam..." Langston Hughes ("The Backlash Blues")