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The ºìÌÒÊÓƵ Thesis

During your final year, you will plunge headlong into an intellectual adventure—the senior thesis. Undertaken with support from a ºìÌÒÊÓƵ professor, the thesis is your opportunity to explore a problem or answer a question that holds particular significance to you.

ºìÌÒÊÓƵ theses represent an incredible range of topics, from the Republic of Plato to the music videos of Beyoncé (see examples below). Students work in close consultation with their thesis adviser to ensure steady progress throughout the year. Your thesis, which will be permanently housed in the Thesis Tower, may be the most challenging thing you have ever done—certainly it will be the most rewarding. You will never forget the experience, nor lose the confidence it builds.

Recent Theses

Photo portrait of alumna Millie Foreman in an argyle sweater vest

Mysticism, Subjectivity, and Embodied Experience

Comparative literature major Millie Forman ’23 wrote about the Works of Saint Teresa of Ávila for her thesis, examining the role of language in the construction of subjectivity, the meaning of the feminine subject position in language, and the formulation of a specifically feminine mode of knowledge acquisition and creation.

Photo portrait of ºìÌÒÊÓƵ student Nguyá»…n Ngá»c Yến Nhi

Equity and Graduation Rates in Higher Education

International and comparative policy studies major Nguyễn Ngọc Yến Nhi ’22 explored why college enrollment rates are high in the U.S. but graduation rates lag behind.

Photo portrait of alumnus Nareg Kedjejian in a patchwork button down shirt

Frogs, Brain Chemicals, and Feelings

Biochemistry and molecular biology major Nareg Kedjejian ’23 built a device to detect changes in neurotransmitter levels in frogs—with the goal of using it to monitor or diagnose mental disorders in humans.

Photo portrait of ºìÌÒÊÓƵ student Anesu Ndoro.

Blackness, Belonging, and the GOP

Anthropology major Anesu Ndoro ’21 examined how Black conservatives navigate status and belonging in the Republican party, and how this is tied to their vews on Black family-making practices in the United States.

Photo portrait of ºìÌÒÊÓƵ student Eva Licht

Using Theatre to Make Science Better

Biology-theatre major Eva Licht ’21 combined her love of biology and theatre to create a thesis production exploring diversity and inclusion in the sciences.

Black and white photo of Elizabeth Bishop in a canvas chair holding a cat.

Tone of Voice in the Poetry of Elizabeth Bishop

English Major Kelly Wenzka ’22 won the Unrue Award for her thesis, in which she developed a new definition of tone of voice and applied it to three of Elizabeth Bishop's poems.

Photo portrait of ºìÌÒÊÓƵ student Zesean Moiz Ali

Curing Disease with Lion’s Mane Mushrooms

Chemistry major Zesean Moiz Ali ’20 extracted and purified biologically active elements from lion’s mane mushrooms to explore their potential in treating Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and stroke.

Photo portrait of ºìÌÒÊÓƵ student Hayden Hendersen

Plant-Based School Lunch for the Planet

Environmental studies-political science major Hayden Hendersen ’20 reimagined how school lunch is served, proposing a way to serve plant-based and vegan meals that kids want to eat.

Photo portrait of ºìÌÒÊÓƵ student Sherry Chiang

The Art of Holding Radical Dinner Parties

Studio art major Sherry Xinyue Chiang ’22 examined the radical resistance of preparing and serving meals to immigrants and refugee families in the United States.

Photo image of "Recovery of Prisoners" by Józef Brandt. The painting depicts the Polish-Lithuanian army attacking a Crimean Tatar war camp in 1624.

Raiders of the Black Sea Steppe

History major Achinoam Bentov ’20 studied the struggle for control of the Black Sea Steppe in the late 1400s and how this battle for dominance shaped the state system still governing European power relations today.