BA Thesis: ‘Anybody may blame me who likes’
10-07-2006 – 14:08It’s finished, take a look! I’ve made a single-spaced and a double-spaced version, pick whichever you think reads better.
BA Thesis single-spaced
BA Thesis double-spaced
Enjoy, and let me know if you have any comments. I have to wait a while for the grade though. And on a side note, I do agree with Virginia Woolf that I definitely need a room of my own and tons o’ money ;)
8 Responses to “BA Thesis: ‘Anybody may blame me who likes’”
Zo… effe vers van de printer gehaald, double-sided, stapled. Ziet er prima uit… al een paar proof-reads gedaan, dus ik weet zeker dat je een dikke 8 gaat halen, misschien zelfs een 9. I’m proud of you.
By FooBar on Jul 10, 2006
Looks good…
At first I was thinking that ‘Anybody may blame me who likes’ was grammatically incorrect and that you had chosen your title badly. But a little research showed me that this was a literal quote… So there’s no problem there :)
I might give it a full read RSN…
By Cailin Coilleach on Jul 11, 2006
Oh! Did I mention that I just -love- the old “Pride and prejudice” TV mini series?
Now I gotta dig out the DVDs
By Cailin Coilleach on Jul 11, 2006
Hehe, you’ve got to love the bbc miniseries of Jane Eyre as well ;)
Used those partly to get the feel of the story… it’s just that it features Timothy Dalton *shiver* ;)
By Wi11ow on Jul 12, 2006
Aww, Timothy makes a wonderful bad guy! Don’t knock Tim…
And I just might like Jane Eyre as well… I’ll look into it. I like the BBC version of P&P because:
1) Hey, it’s a chick flick and I love romantic stories full of intrige.
2) It’s got Julia Sawalha in one of those revealing, period dresses :9
By Cailin Coilleach on Jul 12, 2006
That’s the brilliant part… he’s supposed to be a -good- guy :P
I should get the series of P&P too btw, I love 19th century romance :)
By Wi11ow on Jul 12, 2006
A period dress… is that some kind of dress one is supposed to wear when menstruating?
By Menthol Kees on Jul 14, 2006
Ha… Ha… :p
I -knew- someone was going to make that remark :)
Nah… When using the word “period” in this sense it means “from that day and age”… As in: a dress fitting in the time period the story plays out…
For example, something like this:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/prideandprejudice/photogallery/1024×768/lizzie_lydia.html
I likey…
The first time I encountered the word “period” was when I was still in the SCA (www.sca.org), an international medieval re-enactment group. The term “period” was applied to all the “medieval” stuff we used in our hobby. Or for stuff that we had made, for which there was proof that it was used in “period” times.
By Cailin Coilleach on Jul 15, 2006