Writing
While perhaps now a blissful memory from my past, writing once forged an unmistakable sense of identity for me. While much of this work is merely papers I wrote for my undergraduate courses, I have chosen what I feel were the best and most compelling.
Also included are both my undergraduate and graduate theses. Even though they now exist in a university library somewhere, I figure it is still more likely that someone will read their contents by browsing across this webpage than by a serendipitous search on some college database.
Memento Immorti, my MFA thesis, is an examination of how human consciousness may react if transfered into a digital substrate.
Irenaeus is the second of two musicals I wrote for my undergraduate thesis - the first of which proved disastrous. While much must still be done to this work in order to make it a serious contribution to the oeuvre of classic musicals, it does serve as an interesting account of the ill-remembered beginnings of Christian traditions.
