Heh. The title it gave me was nowhere near as pretentious as the title of my actual dissertation. The official title, anyway. (The real title is "Lea's Big Book of Gay Kings.")
It's "'A Sort of Black Chapters': Historical Representation and the Interrogation of Power in Sixteenth-Century Poetic Depictions of Richard II."
The Gay Kings part (which predates the actual dissertation by several years) really only works plurally if you assume that Henry IV was a closet case. But that's okay, because he totally was. ;)
Anyway. "The Peasant Economy: Aeschylus and the Contestation of Authority." The first time, anyway. After that it kept getting stuck in something unrelated.
Likewise: not the Big Book of Gay Kings, which is awesome, but the failure to match the pretentiousness of my actual dissertation (thesis, even - which is pretentious in itself, not to mention that even my discipline was too pretentious for the code).
the pretentiousness of my actual dissertation (thesis, even - which is pretentious in itself, not to mention that even my discipline was too pretentious for the code).
Nah, not interesting, just pretentious (and a real conversation stopper): it's in Medieval French, and the title is The use of religious vocabulary in non-religious contexts in the octosyllabic verse romances of the 12th and 13th centuries.
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Incidentally, if I place myself in History, I have the same result you had.
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That's pretty awesome.
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You know, there really should have been nothing on this earth that could make me want to put together a techno remix of I, Claudius . . .
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That should so be the title it's published under . . .
(What is the pretentious official title?)
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The Gay Kings part (which predates the actual dissertation by several years) really only works plurally if you assume that Henry IV was a closet case. But that's okay, because he totally was. ;)
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I bow down before your pretentious title. Yeah.
. . . I'd still totally read the book, though.
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Anyway. "The Peasant Economy: Aeschylus and the Contestation of Authority." The first time, anyway. After that it kept getting stuck in something unrelated.
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I think this title and subtitle belong to different dissertations. Possibly also fields of study.
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Now I'm curious.
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Actually, between the vocabulary out of context and the fact that I know nothing about octosyllabic verse romances, I'd read it . . .
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I suppose we'd have lots to talk about, then. ;-)
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You got the better-matched surtitle. "The Future of the Future" sounds like aspects and tenses.