English Paper Topics
Coming up with English paper topics can be deceptively simple. That is, it can appear easy, but since we are accustomed to thinking of books, especially novels, only in terms of whether we liked them or not, it can be more difficult to write a full length paper. Even if writing the paper is easy for you, it may also be boring if you do not have a topic that catches and keeps your interest.
English Paper Topics
Whether you want us to choose your English paper topic and write your paper, or whether you are looking for inspiration to start or continue your own work, we can help! If you aren’t an English major, you might think about the ways that the book you are writing about intersects with your major.
To give you an idea of how you can use any type of book to talk about any kind of subject, I’ll use an example from the self help genre. If you are writing about Marie Kondo’s The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up, you can write about self-help books from the perspective of psychology, sociology, or even anthropology. You can do this by comparing self-help book trends in different countries, or at different times in the same country.
You can also explore the self-help genre from a scientific standpoint, by examining the almost universal failure rates of diets and comparing them with the economic success of the self-help publishing industry. Perhaps you are an economics major, in that case, you can explore the economic trends of the self-help industry versus that of novels.
If you want to write about it in a strictly “English department” way, you can even write about self-help texts in novels. For example, the women in Jane Austen’s novels are often reading self-help texts, usually of a religious nature, because the genre was considered appropriate for women while novels were considered a luxury that would encourage women to be lazy. Some of these perceptions persist today, where women’s choices in reading are derided. So, self-helps texts can be explored as a historical phenomena, a religious imperative, and a feminist reality, in terms of novels alone.
60 Research Paper Topics
We can write about literature, but we can also write literature! That is, if you need short stories, plays, poetry, or other prose fiction, we can write those, as well. Here are another 60 research paper topics for papers about English language texts:
- /Satire: It’s more than just repeating the opposition’s language: Satirical signifiers
- A critical essay: It’s not about complaints or praise
- Adult fantasies of childhood in English language literature of the early twentieth century
- Alice Walker: Books on film
- American protest literature of the 21st century
- Argumentative essay: All writing classes from K-12 should include units on code switching
- Argumentative essay: Why you should recycle and carpool as much as possible
- Audience matters: How thinking about who you are talking to can improve your writing
- Best bites: The Canterbury Tales and how teaching choice parts of ‘great works’ fails students
- Catch-22 book review
- Cause and effect essay: How stereotypes make day to day life harder
- Cause and effect essay: Lies that help and lies that hurt
- Change of scene: Walking, dancing, and sitting in Jane Austen’s novels
- Combat in English literature: King Arthur and others
- Comics and graphic novels: How to write about images
- Comics on screen: iZombie
- Coming of age stories in Go Tell It on the Mountain by James Baldwin
- Conflict with self in I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
- Critical essays include expository, descriptive, definition, and persuasive elements
- Definition essay: You didn’t know and now you do
- Descriptive essay: What I’m talking about in five paragraphs
- Editing as composition: How to improve your writing
- Expository essay: Almost no one enjoyed their K-12 experience, how can we improve the system
- Expository essay: Why “compare and contrast” is both repetitive and unclear
- Fiction into film: Gone Girl and The Leftovers
- Five paragraph essay: The Hunger Games
- From movie, the musical, to movie: Hairspray
- Gendered humor in George Eliot’s Middlemarch
- Harry Potter and the dream of a life without parents
- Hermione Granger and Girl Friday
- Hester Prynne and Monica Lewinski: Puritan narratives of women in America
- Humor in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice
- Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility and Christopher Marlowe’s and Dr. Faustus: I read them in high school and no one knew they were funny
- Literature off the page: Playwriting and screenwriting: The theater background of Tina Fey and other television stars
- Media and identity in contemporary literature
- Misfits and underdogs in literature
- Musical theater rises again: Its influence on contemporary comedy
- My heroes have always been fictional
- Newspaper writing and opinion-editorials: How op-eds evolved in American newspapers
- No drama: Placidity as a mode of cultural control in contemporary novels
- Persuasive essay: Shakespeare should be left behind in the majority of American schools
- Persuasive essay: Why computer literacy should be a part of all education
- Presentation of the self: J.K. Rowling in the Harry Potter books
- Rare birds: Women antiheroes in literature
- Rhetorical devices and responsibility: You, them, we, and me
- Shakespeare, race, and the 21st century
- The Bronte sisters and their terrible men: Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
- The delicacy of the human spirit: George Orwell’s 1984: The responsibility of government toward its citizens
- The emptiness of theme in understanding literature
- The Pacific Northwest in fiction: Lee Maracle’s Ravensong
- The poem I would want read at my funeral and why
- Theater for whom? Race, class, and gender in contemporary drama audiences
- Theater: What plays and vaudeville taught me about television
- Very rich or very poor: The absence of working class life in American novels
- What I learned when I learned how to read poetry
- Where are the real lives? Why don’t contemporary novels have anything about life in them
- Who cares? Why schools should stop teaching William Gold’s The Lord of the Flies
- Words have moods: How to write feelings
- Writing about nature in the 21st century: The return of conquest stories
- Youth is no longer for the young: How teenagers and 20somethings exchanged rhetorics
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