A Harvard University student recently presented a rap album as his thesis to help him pass with honors. Obasi Shaw, 20, from Stone Mountain, Ga., provided a 10-song rap project he put together, becoming the first to do so in the school's long history, reports the Independent.

The project titled, Liminal Minds, takes an in-depth look at Black identity in America as told from different character's perspectives. Shaw said he "never thought it would be accepted by Harvard." Boy was he wrong. The album took Shaw about a year to put together and earned the graduate the second highest grade in the department.

Shaw is no slouch with the lines either. On the first song, "Declaration of Independence," he spits, "Behold, what we hold is three-fold—Body and spirit to be thrones for free souls. Self is the evidence, please close the freak shows, And depose the evils, our peoples are equals."

Harvard has showed love to hip-hop in the past. In 2015, Nas received the school's W.E.B. DuBios medal for significant contribution to the history, culture, intercultural understanding and human rights of Blacks in America. The school has invited a number of MCs to lecture at the university including Chance The Rapper, Pusha T and DJ Khaled.

Earlier this year, it was announced that Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly will be archived in the Harvard Library alongside Nas’ Illmatic, A Tribe Called Quest’s The Low End Theory and Lauryn Hill’s The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.

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