Explaining academia

By Bruno Bayley

0

b4Our friend Chris has recently, and may we say, voluntarily, become unemployed. He is filling his days with museums and galleries and World At War DVDs. The last thing he remembers filling his spare time with before entering the magical world of employment was his dissertation. We thought we would help him fill his newly found time by making him illustrate some of our friends' more impenetrable dissertation titles.

"The Paradox of the Collective Identity and its Inevitable Degeneration in Zamyatin’s We and Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451:
Heretical Art is the Path to Individualism"

by Chris O'Real

The Paradox of the Collective Identity and its Inevitable Degeneration in Zamyatin’s We and Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451

"Indo-European literary representations of witchcraft and necromancy, their influence on Homeric depictions of magic, and their echoes in later classical literature"

by Bruno Bayley

b1

"Formalising Dialogue"

by Ben Freeman

b7

"Rock and Roll and Me"

by Robert Thumbs Downey Junior

b2

"The familial terrorist: from Henry James to 9-11"

by Alex Miller

b6

"Discuss the defining attributes of 11th Century sanctity"

by James Knight

b11

"Sentimental Loneliness and Violent Isolation: Race, Representation and Selves in the American 1950s"

by Oscar Ricket

b9

"The Literature of Disillusionment: A comparison between Evelyn Waugh's
Vile Bodies and Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises"

by Ronojoy Dam

b10

“The rise of rational medicine in the ancient Greek world”

by James 'Joe' Kinneir

b5

"There is no objective truth in objects, nor a single meaning"

by Coco Bayley
b3

"Single atom manipulation in scanning tunneling microscopy"

by Prancehall

prancehall-thesis

CHRIS O'REAL

Comments

0