Concluding Sentences From Several Hypothetical Undergraduate Term Papers
"The blues used during Picasso's blue period were, because of their context, bluer than any blues ever painted with in the past. Bluer than Elijah Wood's eyes. Bluer than the Pacific Ocean. I'm sorry. I'm crying right now." -- From "So Blue, Da Ba Di, I Could Die" written for Intro to Color Theory in…
Education
To summarize, the children are our future. Even the dumb ones. Who are not dumb. They are just differently-futured.
From “What Education Means to Me” for Introduction to Education at Teachers College at Columbia University by Donald Martin
Women’s and Gender Studies
And we see in Othello, the sword represents a penis, which in turn represents a vagina.
From “Sometimes a Cigar is Really a Taco” written for Intro to Women’s and Gender Studies at Wellesley College by Ellen Snipe
Sociology
While human society maintains a rigid structure of parental custody, caregivers in the duck world have much more fluidity as evidenced by Huey, Dewey, and Louie living with a collection of aunts and uncles while their biological parents are never mentioned.
From “Scrooge in Charge” for Sociology of Fictional Societies at Hampshire College by Howard Morris
International and Global Studies
While the free market often leaves poorer nations at a severe disadvantage, the inequality of the fair trade system leaves unlicensed farmers in the cold. In summation, they’re screwed either way. Sorry, Uganda.
From “Why Bother?” for Introduction to Globalization at University of Chicago by Rohit Patel
Art History
The blues used during Picasso’s blue period were, because of their context, bluer than any blues ever painted with in the past. Bluer than Elijah Wood’s eyes. Bluer than the Pacific Ocean. I’m sorry. I’m crying right now.
From “So Blue, Da Ba Di, I Could Die” written for Intro to Color Theory in Art History at Sarah Lawrence College by Tania Crenshaw
English
The Crying of Lot 49 was so confusing that I punched my computer while reading the Sparknotes and had to get a new computer. Thanks for nothing, Pynchon.
From “The Crying of Mike Carvel” for 20th Century Fiction at the University of Iowa by Mike Carvel
Anthropology
Black people and white people are different. But not in a racist way. It’s just society. Does this sound racist? I’m worried this sounds racist.
From “Modern Day Tribes” for Introduction to Ethnography at Brown University by Lisa Hall
Sports Medicine
So don’t sprain your ACL. It’s bad news, bro.
From “Why Stretching is Important” written for Beginning Sports Medicine at the University of Michigan by Doug “The Murph” Murphy
Religious Studies
After all, it turns out that lots of stuff politicians tell us about Islam isn’t actually in the Koran, which can also be spelled Qur’an.
From “Jesus (and Buddha and Moses and Muhammad) are Just Alright With Me” for Intro to Comparative Religious Studies at Brandeis University by Daniel Stern (the tall Daniel Stern with curly brown hair)
Psychology
In accordance with Carl Jung’s principles of analytical psychology, the conscious and unconscious forces within the mind must be unified to achieve happiness. Therefore, to fully realize my inner peace, tonight I will run naked through the halls of my high school like I do in that dream I keep having.
From “The Jung and the Restless” by Jamal Welton for Survey of Modern Psychology at Tulane University
Film
And so, we can clearly see, Jules and Vincent in Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction are reincarnations of the souls of the samurai in Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai. Or are they?
Fin.
From “Stranger Than Pulp Fiction” for Comparative Film Styles at Emerson College by Stefan Orth