Good advice from suchfriends. you don't want to drown yourself in research to the point where you're left with nothing to really say. One way of approaching it is to set up your thesis as a question. That way you're always building towards an attempt to answer it in your conclusion - even if by the end you have to acknowledge that no true answer is available. It gives your writing focus, making it easier to write and easier for your examiner to read, giving both of you a clear indication of what the thesis is about. My suggestion would be to avoid titles that can veer off into various cul de sacs. It's better (and more fulfilling) to build on a simple premise or question than to have to simplify a more complex one.
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