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Here he is deperately trying to keep his job ... Dr Kealey said his article was a "moral piece" which used humour to encourage people to exercise self-restraint. "Sex between academics and students is not funny, and should not be a source of humour," he wrote. "But employing humour to highlight the ways by which people try to resolve the dissonance between what is publicly expected of them and how they actually feel - not just in this context - reaches back to origins of humour itself."