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The Strangeness Of Being Alive, Marxe Altman Orbach Jan 2023

The Strangeness Of Being Alive, Marxe Altman Orbach

Senior Projects Spring 2023

Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College.


Coup De Grâce, Violet Rea Mass Jan 2023

Coup De Grâce, Violet Rea Mass

Senior Projects Spring 2023

This project, composed of an introduction and a fiction piece, explores the complex power dynamics at play on the university stage put into perspective of the Human Rights study. The fiction follows young Olive as arrives for her first term at a university in a secluded valley where she must come to terms with a darkness greater than she had ever imagined.


Electric Snake, David Y. Liang Jan 2022

Electric Snake, David Y. Liang

Senior Projects Spring 2022

A blend of fantastic, noir, and cyberpunk elements. Prose.

Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College


Basement Girls, Skylar Hauge Jan 2021

Basement Girls, Skylar Hauge

Senior Projects Spring 2021

Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College.


Bruised Oranges, Blair Peppe Jan 2021

Bruised Oranges, Blair Peppe

Senior Projects Spring 2021

Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College.


A Nameless Blue, Francis (Elle) Lawson Mitchell Jan 2021

A Nameless Blue, Francis (Elle) Lawson Mitchell

Senior Projects Spring 2021

A Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College, Written Arts. A science fiction novel about queerness, disability, the heart and the body. The novel considers where the biological and the mechanical meet, and where the body intersects with relationships of power, the state, production and religion.


Art As Therapy: Using Fictional Written Accounts In The Treatment Of Ptsd, Nathanael J. Matos Jan 2021

Art As Therapy: Using Fictional Written Accounts In The Treatment Of Ptsd, Nathanael J. Matos

Senior Projects Spring 2021

Though art therapies and cognitive therapies are both well-established as treatments for PTSD, no studies thus far have tried to consolidate the pros of each into a single therapy. Through modifications to CPT procedures to include expressive fictional written accounts rather than the standard autobiographical account of traumatic events, I believe that the expressive writing paradigm can be utilised to create a new therapeutic procedure for PTSD. Due to lesser emotional intensity and the freedom allowed by creative endeavours, I believe that this procedure would not only yield positive outcomes comparable to CPT, but also have lower drop-out rates than …


Animals And People, Nikolas Slackman Jan 2020

Animals And People, Nikolas Slackman

Senior Projects Fall 2020

A novella detailing the end of photographer Eadweard Muybridge's life, after his return to Kingston-upon-Thames. His story is intercut with quotations and investigations into the Kanun of Lekë Dukagjini, an ancient Albanian codebook.


A Troop, A Raft, A Bed, Hanna Jane Guendel Jan 2020

A Troop, A Raft, A Bed, Hanna Jane Guendel

Senior Projects Spring 2020

A Troop, a Raft, a Bed tells the interwoven fictional stories of three major animals (the mountain gorilla, the Adélie penguin, and the American eel) and four transitional animals (the white stork, the humpback whale, the common octopus, and the great white shark). The stories are told from the animals' perspectives, and are written with language that considers each animal's unique intelligence, mind, and behavior. These stories seek to communicate how animals around the world may be experiencing the various effects of climate change and global warming.


“How Difficult Not To Go Making ‘Reality’ This And That”: Virginia Woolf’S Record Of Representation, Julia E. Eifert Jan 2020

“How Difficult Not To Go Making ‘Reality’ This And That”: Virginia Woolf’S Record Of Representation, Julia E. Eifert

Senior Projects Spring 2020

Virginia Woolf writes in her journal in March 1929 that:

[...]Life is very solid, or very shifting? I am haunted by the two contradictions. This has gone on for ever: will last forever; goes down to the bottom of the world- this moment I stand on. Also it is transitory, flying, diaphanous. I shall pass like a cloud on the waves. Perhaps it may be that though we change; one flying after another, so quick so quick, yet we are somehow successive and continuous- we human beings; and show the light through.

Woolf obsessively journaled her anxieties concerning the linearity …


Speaking The Unspeakable: Armenian Women’S Fiction Generations After Genocide, Elena Lucine Lefevre Jan 2018

Speaking The Unspeakable: Armenian Women’S Fiction Generations After Genocide, Elena Lucine Lefevre

Senior Projects Spring 2018

Senior Project submitted to The Division of Social Studies of Bard College.


Spearfish, Sawyer Germaine Dohman Jan 2018

Spearfish, Sawyer Germaine Dohman

Senior Projects Spring 2018

Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College.


The Delicatessen Kids, Raina Nicole Dziuk Jan 2018

The Delicatessen Kids, Raina Nicole Dziuk

Senior Projects Spring 2018

The Delicatessen Kids is a collection of short stories that follows 4 Ukrainian-American siblings as they grow up in 1960s Brooklyn, New York.


Remembering Elsewhere, Amelia Ernestine Walsh Jan 2017

Remembering Elsewhere, Amelia Ernestine Walsh

Senior Projects Spring 2017

In my works, I tried very hard to create characters with unusual perspectives. I wanted to write from the point of view of children, while avoiding anything overly precious or intentionally naive. The trauma of aging, and eventually dying, are the themes for these works. I attempted to draw forth unusual and thought-provoking imagery that could successfully draw my reader into a constructed reality and, hopefully, draw them to less common questions we might ask regarding human nature.


Lost Women, Recently Found, Maya Moverman Jan 2016

Lost Women, Recently Found, Maya Moverman

Senior Projects Spring 2016

Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College