Essay Topic Hub

Wall Street
Essays

509+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

509 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Wall Street functions as both a literal financial district and a symbol of American capitalism, making it a subject that appears across business, economics, ethics, political science, and cultural studies courses. Students write about it to examine how financial institutions, investment firms, and market forces shape economic life at every level. Its complexity — spanning regulatory frameworks, corporate culture, and moral questions about wealth — gives it sustained academic relevance. Works and cases like Long Term Capital Management and figures such as Burton Malkiel appear in papers because they ground abstract financial theory in real consequences, while cultural texts like The Wolf of Wall Street and The Bonfire of the Vanities invite analysis of how American culture mythologizes and critiques financial power simultaneously.

The papers written on this topic take a notably wide range of approaches. Some focus on ethical evaluation, weighing the conduct of firms like Goldman Sachs against competing moral frameworks. Others are case-study driven, analyzing specific events such as the FedEx and Kinko's merger or the collapse of Long Term Capital Management for lessons in risk and strategy. Literary and film analysis essays treat Wall Street as a cultural lens, while personal and professional writing — including admission essays — use it as context for individual career narratives. Strategic management and investment banking papers tend toward industry analysis and applied theory.

A strong essay on Wall Street needs a focused thesis that commits to one dimension — ethical, historical, strategic, or cultural — rather than trying to address all of them. Evidence drawn from specific firms, market events, or named financial instruments carries more weight than broad generalizations about greed or capitalism. The most common pitfall is treating Wall Street as a monolithic villain or hero; nuanced essays acknowledge institutional complexity and avoid reducing financial culture to a single moral verdict.

509 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Day of the Locust
"In December of 2008, the National Bureau of Economic Research - the department responsible for categorizing our economic condition - finally acknowledged what most of Americans had known for some time: that the U.S.
Research Paper Doctorate
Business literature: overview and analysis
Values in 1920 America were changing rapidly from the Victorian attitudes that preceded them, and the novel "The Great Gatsby," by F. Scott Fitzgerald clearly epitomizes these changing values.
Research Paper Doctorate
Greed in society: causes, effects, and cultural implications
¶ … greed in our society, its deteriorating impact on our society and ways to curtail the same. The Works Cited five sources in MLA format.
Essay Doctorate
Toshiba Gender Discrimination: Personal Networking to Reduce Turnover
Toshiba: How Personal Networking Can Be Used to Avoid High-Turnover
Paper Doctorate
Walt Whitman and Herman Melville \"Crossing Brooklyn
Walt Whitman's poem "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" and Herman Melville's short story "Bartleby the Scrivener" are set in New York City during the early years of the industrial revolution, but are markedly different in tone, theme and the perceptions and feelings of the main characters. Melville's characters exist without joy, love or hope, and merely drag themselves through a life of drudgery and alienation, without making any human connections to each other or to nature. Mankind in Bartleby's world is simply trapped in a pointless existence that ends with death, and unlike Whitman's narrator they are unable to rise above this grim, mundane world or imagine a common link with others or with the past and the future. Rather than simply being tools and machines carrying out routine, white-collar tasks, Whitman's narrator finds the resources within himself to transform an ordinary scene of returning home from work into a sublime spiritual experience, in which he perceives a bond with all of mankind, past, present and future, as well as with nature and the entire universe in a way that Bartleby and his coworkers never could have imagined.
Research Paper Doctorate
Business: The Dark Side of Meeting Online
Corporate Governance and the Failed Marriage of AOL and Time Warner
Thesis Doctorate
Advancements in the Humanities
This paper examines Vietnam and its cultural effect on American, in particularly on the Dream that seemed so tangible and real in the radical decades of the 1960s and 70s. Yet, by the 80s the Dream had faded and given out to rampant materialism. How had this happened? The Dream was doomed to fail because it was ultimately hollow, made of idealism and materialism and the latter proved stronger.
Research Paper Doctorate
Walmart Growth, Consumer Confidence, and the 2004 Economy
Growth The retailer sector was lately affected by the back-to-school shopping season, which did not start so well, as midprice department stores, discounters and specialty-apparel retailers announced disappointing sales…
Research Paper Doctorate
Project management principles and practices
The project selected for this study is the opening of a new restaurant in New York City. This restaurant will be named: "Home Grown." It will be fashioned after the restaurant-creation in the television program…
Research Paper Doctorate
Literature: overview and analysis
Although Melville's story of the scrivener would ostensibly seem to be about the mysterious stranger named Bartleby, it can more accurately be described as a story about the effect that Bartleby had on those around him,…