Essays: English

These English essay examples were generated by our Basic AI essay writer to support students working on literary analysis and academic writing. Topics include Shakespearean tragedy, postcolonial literature, narrative voice in contemporary fiction, and the impact of historical context on literary themes. Use these examples to help structure your own critical essays and develop your argumentation skills.

English essays

Summarise the Story of Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe

Introduction Christopher Marlowe’s The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus, commonly known as Doctor Faustus, is a seminal work in ...
English essays

Discuss the symbolic significance of the good and evil angel in Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe

Introduction Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus, first performed around 1592, is a seminal work of Elizabethan tragedy that explores themes of ambition, knowledge, and damnation ...
English essays

The Importance of Reading in Everyday Life and Academic Contexts

Introduction In the module ENG2611, which explores foundational aspects of English studies including literacy and literary analysis, the significance of reading emerges as a ...
English essays

What Defines Visayas Literature?

Introduction Visayas literature, emerging from the central region of the Philippines, encompasses a rich tapestry of narratives shaped by the area’s linguistic diversity, cultural ...
English essays

In academic spaces, writing is often framed as a neutral, objective skill—a set of gears one learns to turn to produce a grade. However, my experience as a South Sudanese student complicates this sterile assumption. For me, literacy is not a detached tool; it is an embodied lifeworld. This tension between the internal experience of the writer and the external expectations of the institution is best understood through the “outside” and “inside” perspectives of the craft. My mother, for instance, views writing as an art form from the outside looking in. For her, text is a “beautiful necessity”—a bridge of profound utility used to message family across borders or coordinate the labor of her workday. She observes the art with a deep respect for its power to connect, yet she remains external to the grueling, creative struggle of the process itself. In contrast, I look from within the art form out. I do not merely use writing; I inhabit it. My literacy history began long before the classroom, sparked by the “sponsorship” of South Sudanese cinema and stories I found online as a young child. Films like The Good Lie provided more than entertainment; they offered a visual language of displacement and resilience that I felt a physical urge to translate into text. This “uptake,” as scholar Angela Rounsaville might describe it, wasn’t just about learning a genre; it was about “worlding” my own identity. I became so consumed by this internal world that I began to embody the craft through sheer time and sacrifice. In school, I would often rush through my standard homework—doing it just to clear the path—so I could return to my own writing. While my peers were hanging out or playing, I chose the solitude of the page. To me, those hours weren’t a chore; they were the only way to breathe in the air of the worlds I was building. This level of embodiment, however, creates a unique friction when entering the “discourse community” of the university. As Kevin Roozen argues, writing is a “distributed web of activity,” meaning my current academic essays are inextricably linked to those solitary hours of my youth and the cinematic imagination that first pushed me to write. Yet, the transition is rarely seamless. Dylan B. Dryer’s claim that “writing is not natural” resonates with me daily. There is a sharp internal friction when I try to force the fluid, atmospheric stories of my “inside” world into the rigid, linear structures required by a rubric. My earlier drafts often mirrored the oral traditions of my culture—lingering in context and wandering through narrative before making a claim. The challenge of my literacy journey is to bridge these two perspectives: to maintain the “beautiful” intentionality my mother sees from the outside while continuing to live within the art form. By recognizing that my academic writing is a continuation of my cinematic and digital histories, I can begin to see the university’s requirements not as a cage, but as a new genre to embody. My portfolio revision is not just an assignment; it is a way to foreground my thesis without losing the “inside” voice that has been my constant companion since childhood. To be a writer, I have realized, is to honor the sacrifice of the solitary hours while learning to speak across the bridges my mother so beautifully maintains.In ENG 101 this semester, I have come to see writing as a dynamic practice that extends far beyond graded assignments. While the syllabus and Portfolio Assessment Rubric (PAR) emphasize “academic writing,” our course readings reveal a broader writer’s life that thrives outside the classroom. Synthesizing Dylan B. Dryer’s argument that “writing is not natural” (28) with Amy Stornaiuolo and Bethany Monea’s concept of “pocket writing,” I uncover a key tension: the disconnect between institutionally visible writing and the private, self-sponsored practices tucked into students’ phones and notebooks. This essay traces my line of inquiry into how these hidden literacies challenge the PAR’s narrow view of writerly development. What happens when transformative writing stays invisible to evaluators? How might ENG 101 bridge this gap without erasing privacy? Dryer’s claim that “writing is not natural” but a “learned technology” shaped by histories, communities, and expectations challenges the myth of innate talent. It aligns with our course’s focus on “uptake” (Dryer 28). My own uptake illustrates this: in high school, I mastered formulaic five-paragraph essays, which now clash with ENG 101’s emphasis on inquiry-driven reflection in the PAR. This prior genre knowledge both enables and limits me, prompting my question: How do past literacies influence growth in new academic contexts? Kevin Roozen extends this by describing writer identity as a “distributed web of activity” across overlapping social practices (Roozen 17). For me, ENG 101 assignments form just one node in this network—connected to, say, the fanfiction I draft in private Google Docs, where I experiment with character voices without fear of grades. Stornaiuolo and Monea deepen the inquiry with “pocket writing”: “self-sponsored texts that circulate in constrained ecologies,” hinging on “privacy (control over who sees it) and durability (a persistent record of growth” (Stornaiuolo and Monea ). Unlike institutional writing, pocket writing circulates in peer networks, fostering emotion and resistance—especially for writers from marginalized communities under surveillance. In my life, pocket writing includes unsent text drafts to friends, venting about college stress, or anime-inspired story fragments in my Notes app. These pieces capture raw reflection that my ENG 101 reflections rarely match, yet they remain hidden from the PAR. This private-public divide sharpens when scrutinizing the PAR, which assesses organization, citation, and metacognition—assuming growth is evidenced in submitted work. But if my most growth-filled writing—like group chat debates on social issues or aborted essay drafts—stays private, the rubric misses crucial evidence. What counts as “development” if personal literacies evade evaluation? The PAR encourages reflection, yet prioritizes public forms, sidelining pocket practices that build resilience and voice. To extend this inquiry, consider a new connection: Anna Rounsaville’s idea of literacies as part of our “lifeworld” suggests ENG 101 could invite optional sharing of pocket writing excerpts (anonymized) in low-stakes reflections (Rounsaville). Ultimately, these readings urge ENG 101 to value writing as a lifelong ecosystem, not just a classroom output. By questioning which literacies academia permits—and why—we redefine writerly growth more inclusively.”

This essay explores the tension between personal, embodied literacy experiences and institutional expectations in academic writing, drawing from my perspective as a South Sudanese ...
English essays

Compare how Angela Carter in The Bloody Chamber and Charlotte Perkins Gilman in The Yellow Wallpaper explore female confinement and the struggle for autonomy within patriarchal structures

Introduction This essay compares the ways in which Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber (1979) and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper (1892) examine female ...
English essays

The Role of Grief in Holden Caulfield’s Contradictory Actions and Character Development in The Catcher in the Rye

Introduction J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye (1951) remains a cornerstone of American literature, exploring themes of adolescence, alienation, and loss through the ...
English essays

The Primacy of Biological Factors in Serial Killer Behavior: A Nature vs. Nurture Perspective

Introduction The debate over whether serial killer behavior stems primarily from innate biological factors or environmental influences has long captivated researchers in criminology and ...
English essays

The Erosion of Human Abilities: Over-Reliance on Conveniences in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and Laurie Simmons’ The Love Doll

Introduction In an increasingly automated world, the global issue of individuals losing the ability to perform tasks due to over-reliance on conveniences has become ...
English essays

Layers of Meaning in Ray Bradbury’s “There Will Come Soft Rains”: An Analysis of Style and Literary Elements Creating Mood

Introduction Ray Bradbury’s short story “There Will Come Soft Rains,” first published in 1950 as part of his collection The Martian Chronicles, presents a ...