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Star Trek PhD Thesis Wins Academic Prize

An anonymous reader writes "A PhD thesis based on Star Trek has won an Australian university's top academic prize. Dr Djoymi Baker's 90,000 word dissertation 'Broadcast Space: TV Culture, Myth and Star Trek' was awarded the University of Melbourne's Chancellor's Prize for Excellence in the PhD. Dr Baker watched over 700 Star Trek episodes — more than 624 hours — to investigate the relationship between ancient mythology and today's popular culture. American academics thought her research was 'superlative' and suitable for teaching."

2 of 348 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Today's "true" myths by Drooling+Iguana · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Star Wars mostly ignores science. Star Trek actively butchers it at every opportunity.

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    ... I'm addicted to placebos
  2. Re:Proof by Quaoar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Culture is culture. If no one looks at culture of the present day, we lose a lot of valuable information. You're basically saying it's OK to abolish the study of culture at the university level. And while I am not personally interested in Star Trek, I do think that it has had an amazing influence over a large portion of the general population, and studying that effect is definitely worth the effort. And I wouldn't be surprised if someone doesn't look at the effect of the Simpsons on our civilization. Ignoring the mundane details that describe our culture means ignoring the essence of culture as a whole.

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    I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!