| Title | Pages |
| 'Tyrannical dads create tyrannical offspring'. | 9 |
| The Waste Land and The Sun Also Rises . | 4 |
| Things go awry: Tragedy and Fate in Of Mice and Men and Lord of the Flies . | 11 |
| Tartuffe and Phaedra: Comedy vs. Tragedy. | 3 |
| Technology and the Body: The Relationship between Humanity and its Biosphere in Two Works of Science Fiction. | 8 |
| The 'Inventive' Nature Of Authors In Their Stories About Culture. | 3 |
| The Alien in Science Fiction. | 3 |
| The Catalyst Character in Literature: An Examination of Two Short Stories. | 8 |
| The Alternate Consciousness as Freedom and Critique. | 7 |
| The Attitude Toward Religion in Lives of the Saints and Captain Corelli's Mandolin . | 6.5 |
| The Bread Givers and The Great Gatsby. | 6 |
| The Characters of Clarissa in Woolf's and Cunningham's Novel. | 5 |
| The Characters of Okonkwo and Tata Ndu: A Comparison of Success in Preserving Traditions. | 5 |
| The Characters of Othello and Jane Eyre as 'Other'. | 6 |
| The Coming of Age Story: Three Examples and Examinations. | 5 |
| The Comparison Between The Use Of Style In Two Of The Texts, Voltaire's Candide And Jean Racine's Phedre. | 5 |
| The Concept of Irishness : Irish Identity in the Works of Joyce and Yeats. | 7 |
| The Concept of Hospitality in Homer's The Odyssey and (Anon.) Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. | 5 |
| The Concept of a Learned Oppression and Two Books on Social Theory. | 7 |
| The Dichotomy Between Appearance and Reality. | 4 |
| The Discoveries Of Manhood. | 3 |
| The Function of Denial in Hesse's Siddhartha and Hemingway's Indian Camp. | 12 |
| The Heroic Ideal in the Narratives of Gilgamesh and Odysseus | 6 |
| The Hidden Truth. | 4 |
| The Importance of Individual Experience. | 3 |
| The Male Role in Hawthorne's The Birth Mark and Dickens's A Christmas Carol : the poverty of rationalism, scientific and material. | 4 |
| The Meaning of the Word Pilgrimage Within the book Pilgrimage by Paul Coehlo and Joseph Conrad's book Heart of Darkness. | 4 |
| The Mother- Figure in Two Novels: A Comparison of the Characters of Joan and Mrs. Ramsey. | 6 |
| The Nature of the Pilgrimage: A Comparison of Two Literary Pilgrimages. | 5 |
| The Outsider in America: Survival of the Fittest. | 6 |
| The Presentation of Marriage in The Real Thing and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf | 4 |
| The Question of Self in The Immoralist and Their Eyes Were Watching God. | 6 |
| The Question of Should We in Science Fiction. | 4 |
| The Representation of Corruption in Dante's Inferno, Chaucer's The Pardoner's Tale , and Shakespeare's Hamlet. | 8 |
| The Role of Love in Fiction and Non- Fiction. | 4 |
| The Role of Religion in America. | 3 |
| The Role of the Denial of Death In Two Classic Works of Fiction. | 3 |
| The Romantic Period and the Manifestations of Nature In Two Works. | 3 |
| The Sense of Community Found in a City: Assessing Three Works on Urban Communities. | 4 |
| The Similarities and Contrasts in Shall I compare thee to a summer's day and A Good Man is Hard to Find. | 4 |
| The Similarities of Alexander pope, Jonathan Swift, and Moliere in the Enlightenment Period. | 4 |
| The Six Conventions in More's Utopia and Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale . | 12 |
| The Story of Medea and Nora's Rebellion in Ibsen's "A Doll's House". | 6 |
| The Structure of Symbolism in Poe and O'Connor. | 4 |
| The Supernatural in Dante's Inferno and the Epic of Gilgamesh. | 8 |
| The Terrorist, Whatever happened to Janie, The Face on the Milk Carton, The Voice on the Radio, What Janie Found written by Caroline Cooney. | 5 |
| The Themes of Love and Death in Two Works. | 3 |
| The Three Great Authors: The Innovations of Woolf, Joyce, and Lawrence. | 7 |
| The Tyrannical Father's Influence in Paddy Clarke, Ha, Ha, Ha! and Ricci's Lives of the Saints. | 8 |
| The Utility of Literary Theory and Criticism | 18 |
| The concept of justice. | 5 |
| The morality of Jane Eyre. | 2 |
| The passages from five works to be discussed. | 13 |
| Things Fall Apart Even After The Second Coming. | 5 |
| Three Love Stories With Different Approaches. | 5 |
| Three Men, Three Different Views of Romance. | 3 |
| Three Plays Three Views. | 3 |
| Three Tales One Theme. | 4 |
| Time Travel: Comparisons and Contrasts. | 5 |
| Time and Space in Wordsworth and Blake | 6 |
| Timeless Qualities in Literature: Appealing to Basic Human Nature Rather than Entertainment. | 5 |
| Tragedies Can Be Subjective. | 5 |
| Tragedy: Literary Heroes. | 5 |
| Tragic Characters: Orestes and Thomas a Beckett. | 8 |
| Tripitaka in Wu Cheng-ens Monkey | 3 |
| Truth and Identity in "A Doll's House" and "Oedipus the King". | 3 |
| Two Malevolent Characters With Only One Sympathetic One. | 3 |
| Two Men One Heart. | 10 |
| Two Novel Comparison. | 4 |
| Two Stories and a Comparison of Genre: Latin Magical Realism and American Moralism. | 5 |