COMM 450 It is generally specialized and specific and IV. Dialogue You will be asked to choose two classical/medieval authors from a list provided. http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
This Guide Is Designed To Help You Use The Library's Reference on specific authors, specific series they cover authors from all literatures and languages throughout the world. Classical and Medieval http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
McGraw-Hill Higher Education - English by 59 different authors " including Plato, Aristotle, and Sophocles. The Online Medieval and Classical or a problem about a specific book or http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
MLSG Panels 199?-1999 MEDIEVAL LATIN COMMENTARIES ON CLASSICAL AUTHORS Organized by Shirley Werner, Rutgers University Yet it could also depart from specific authors http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2004.01.01 On the whole, the individual analyses of specific authors seem (to this and that the principle of periodization from classical, medieval, and http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
Specific Authors Subjects Medieval Literature Specific Literary Authors Subjects AngloSaxon Old English. Arthurian * Online Medieval and Classical Library http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
Medieval Literature Resource Guide html Used to find specific authors or Bibliographies, journals, authors, and links to various search engines. Online Medieval and Classical http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
Studies In Bibliography, Volume 36 (1983) Classical, Biblical, and Medieval Textual Criticism and Modern Editing by G for Editions of American Authors 3 of very wide specific http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126
Current Courses specific authors studied will include Jerome, Bede, Eadmer, and Bonaventure,among others. and that serve to distinguish medieval from classical Latin, http://www.unm.edu/~medinst/academics/courses/coursecurr.html
Extractions: An introduction to the language, literature, and civilization of Anglo-Saxon England (A.D. 600-1100), the course is designed to prepare students for more advanced linguistic, literary, and cultural studies in this and later periods. The course is the first in a series of courses that center on Old English and Old Icelandic language and literature; it is succeeded by Beowulf and/or Studies in Old English Literature in the Spring. In addition to translation and the concurrent study of grammar, phonology, and versification, the course will offer lectures on the elements of Germanic language, on developments into modern English, and slide presentations dealing with art, archaeology, and social and political history. Quizzes, midterm, final. Graduate students will do a paper. The course is open to undergraduates. This course applies toward the Minor in Medieval Studies, and toward the Ph.D. concentration in Medieval Studies.
Template: Drexel University Libraries You can also search for authors from specific time periods or literary movements . classical and medieval Literature Criticism (Vol. 1, 1988 Vol. 13) http://www.library.drexel.edu/resources/guides/lit.html
Extractions: Resources ... About the Libraries document.write(breadcrumb); If you have any comments/questions about the resources listed below or would like further assistance with your research, please contact Alison Lewis , Humanities and Social Science Librarian, at 215.895.2765 or alewis@drexel.edu Introduction This guide is intended to give an overview of information sources available for students doing research on literature. If you are looking for information on drama , please see the supplemental Drama Resource Guide , in addition to this one. Author Information Criticism Guides Books Finding Articles ... More help... Finding Information about Authors Finding information about an author is a common activity when studying literature. The tools listed below will help you find general biographical information on authors, such as their birth and death dates, where they lived, who their friends, families, and associates were, and what life experiences influenced their writing. The items in this list are found in either in the Electronic Resources or in the Reference Collection at Hagerty Library.
American And English Literature Internet Resources Contains general criticisms on authors and specific periods, text archives and classical, medieval, Renaissance, Restoration, 18th Century, Romantic, http://library.scsu.ctstateu.edu/litbib.html
Extractions: American and English Language Internet Resources Contents Electronic Texts General Literature Sources American Literature General Resources American Literature Drama and Theater ... Alex: A Catalogue of Electronic Texts on the Internet Alex indexes over 700 books and shorter texts and retrieves these documents full-text on the Internet. Does not include serials. Has search feature where you can enter author or title. Internet Classic Archive A searchable collection of almost 400 classical Greek and Roman texts in English (complete) with user-provided commentary. Literature: Electronic Books and Journals Contains full-text fiction and non-fiction books in alphabetical order as well as sites that contain electronic texts on the internet. Includes journals and newsletters. The On-Line Books Page A storehouse of on-line books and other documents which includes more than 1800 English works in various formats. A list of on-line publishers and retailers is available. Also includes a list of banned books on-line and links to other book repositories. Project Bartleby Includes texts and reference works as well as the poetical works of Dickinson, Eliot, Frost, Keats, Shelley, Whitman, Wordsworth, Yeats, etc. It is one of the largest collections of on-line literature currently available on the net.
Extractions: TWU Homepage A-Z Sitemap Search the TWU site Accessibility Policy ... For Students Undergraduate English Courses First Year Composition ENG 1003. Introduction to Writing . Required of all freshmen who do not meet entrance requirements for ENG 1013. Includes intensive instruction and exercise in syntax, punctuation, spelling. and vocabulary development. English 1003 does not satisfy any English requirement, and hours earned will not count toward graduation requirements. Three lecture hours, week. Credit: Three hours. ENG 1013. Composition I . (ENGL 1301) Theory and practice of written and oral exposition and research in traditional and electronic environments; rhetorical principles and organization in practice. Prerequisite ENG 1003 , passing score on or exemption from placement exam. Three lecture hours a week. Credit: Three hours. Core composition requirement. ENG 1023. Composition II . (ENGL 1302) Theory and practice of written and oral exposition and research in traditional and electronic environments; composing persuasive and investigative texts based on research. Prerequisite ENG 1013 or its equivalent.Three lecture hours a week. Credit: Three hours. Core composition requirement. ENG 2013. English Literary Masterpieces
Extractions: UWA Quick List Accreditation Administrative Services Applications (UWA and Online) Blackboard @ UWA Bookstore Bookstore Online Business Development Calendars - UWA Calendars - Student Activities Calendars - UWA Online Catalogues Child Care UWA Campus School Class Schedules Continuing Education Dining Services at UWA Economic Development Employment Financial Aid Office Inclement Weather Policy Message from the President Online Degrees at UWA Publications Reg. Center Community Economic Dev. Small Business Development Center Transcript Request Transfer Assistance Turnitin.com Where is UWA? UWA Site Map Julia S. Tutwiler Library Home Julia S. Tutwiler Library Literature General Sources guides to literature and criticism on the Internet. Miscellaneous sites Explicator index and the Literary Calendar. GENERAL SOURCES Classic Reader Read, research and annotate classic literature. NOTE: There is a lot of advertisement on this page however, if the links in the top blue banner are clicked it will direct you to actual full text literature at no cost.
MLSG Panels 199?-1999 medieval LATIN COMMENTARIES ON classical authors Yet it could also departfrom specific authors to general topics such as allegory and allegoresis, http://classics.rutgers.edu/mlsg/previous.html
Extractions: medieval scholarship. The panel will explore different aspects of this long tradition of exegesis and interpretation. Proposals on a variety of topics are welcome, and may include studies of the ongoing tradition of commentary on particular classical works or authors; of particular commentaries (published or unpublished); of the medieval scholia that were written
Center For Liberal Arts - University Of Virginia The site is organized by subject area (classical, medieval, Renaissance, etc . and outlines for specific topics and authors important to the periods. http://www.virginia.edu/cla/resources/englit.html
Extractions: ffff GENERAL The University of Virginia Electronic Text Center (David Seaman, University of Virginia) A vast collection of electronic texts, mainly English, but also some in French, German, Japanese, and Latin as well. The Modern English Collection (AD 1500-present) This site represents just a section of the thousands of online texts available through the UVa Electronic Text Center. The Modern English Collection contains 1,398 titles including 4,035 manuscript and book illustrations, many of which are publicly accessible. Meridian (University of Virginia) A semiannual literary journal produced by creative writing students at UVa. Brown University Women Writers Project This site focuses on pre-1830 women writers. Literary Resources on the Net (Jack Lynch, University of Pennsylvania) A survey of the collection of literary resources (online texts, commentary, organizations) available online. The site is organized by subject area (Classical, Medieval, Renaissance, etc.) or you can search the directory for something specific. Project Gutenberg Begun in 1971, the project is an electronic collection of literary works from Cicero's Orations to the complete works of Shakespeare to Zitkala-Sa's old Indian Legends to selections from Edith Wharton.
Specific Authors & Subjects specific Literary authors Subjects Online medieval and classical Library.University of CA, Berkley Douglas Killings Ed. http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/hss/medieval/Advanced Searching/LiteratureAuthorsSubjec
Extractions: can be found on a separate page by clicking here Arthurian click here Beowulf To examine resources specifically devoted to Beowulf, then click here Chaucer For those seeking information on Chaucer, please click here Dante To find resources on Dante please click here Gower Yeager, Robert. John Gower Materials: A Bibliography through 1979 . Garland Reference Library of the Humanities; Vol. 266. New York: Garland Publ. 1981.
BCLS - Literature LITERARY RESOURCES ON THE NET links to classical, medieval, Renaissance, 18thCentury and more. specific authors of the 18th Century. http://www.baycountylibrary.org/TeenPage/literature.htm
ALA | Medieval Studies of resources are focused on specific medieval authors and subjects; Online medieval and classical Library (University of California, Berkley). http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/crlnews/backissues2005/April05/medievalstud
Extractions: ALA American Library Association Search ALA Contact ALA ... Login Quicklinks Career Opportunities Chapters CHOICE Committees Directory of Leadership e-Learning Forms Information Literacy Marketing @ your library Publications Catalog RBM Recruiting to the Profession Scholarly Communication Sections Tipsheets Publications Labyrinth (Georgetown University). The Labyrinth is an excellent gateway to electronic resources made available through Georgetown University. Resources are carefully selected from the Internet and include primary texts, secondary texts and articles, course materials, bibliographies, images, maps, and other items. There are 45 subject categories that one can browse for information; also, there are category fields that can be highlighted in conjunction with a keyword search to create a specific query. Categories are quite specific, as indicated from these items selected from the middle of the alphabet: Feudalism, French (Old), Furniture, Gardens, Gender and Sexuality, Geography, and German (Middle High). The Labyrinth is one of the very best places to go to locate information related to medieval subjects. Access: http://labyrinth.georgetown.edu
English CALL Courses and images in a wide variety of texts ancient, classical, medieval, Translation specific authors In this course students will practice the art of http://www.dawsoncollege.qc.ca/departments/core/english/cour_call.php
Extractions: Powered by Prospective Students Current Student Prospective Employees Corporate Visitors ... Phone Directory Quick Links Academic Calendar Bookstore Grades Online Cancelled Classes Library ISEP Parc/Athletics Student Union Reach For The Top! CARS Class Lists Capital Requests DOLRS Dawson Intranet DocuShare Employee Benefits Faculty Schedules Online Forms Help Desk WebCT Teacher Assistance Web Mail Work Requests BACK HOME ENGLISH DEPARTMENT Introduction ... Faculty List Courses In this course students will consider some of the topics that have shaped the discourse of arts and letters. These topics will be selected to coordinate with the topics for the third-semester Essay course. In each semester, at least three topics will be selected. [See the English Department's "Critical Topics" List.] Through the study of literary criticism, students will learn to analyse and interpret an artistic or literary work as well as to form and justify a critical judgment about the work using appropriate criteria ; they will also learn how to present their critical and interpretive views clearly in an MLA-format critical essay. 4 hrs. per week. 603-431-DW In this course students will learn about the origin and the development of the English language and will apply their knowledge to the criticism of literary texts in English from the 5th to the 21st centuries. Through discussions, lectures, projects and essays, students will learn to (1) analyse and interpret a literary text as well as to form and justify a critical judgment about the text. using appropriate criteria; (2) interpret literary texts; and (3) present their critical and interpretive views clearly in an MLA-format critical essay. 4 hrs. per week.
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2004.01.01 On the whole, the individual analyses of specific authors seem (to this classicistand and that the principle of periodization from classical, medieval, http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2004/2004-01-01.html
Extractions: Word count: 2186 words J. Farrell, "Greek Lives and Roman Careers in the Classical Vita Tradition"; M. Vessey, "From Cursus to Ductus : Figures of Writing in Western Late Antiquity (Augustine, Jerome, Cassiodorus, Bede)"; R.R. Edwards, "Medieval Literary Careers: The Theban Track"; J. F. Burke, "Authority and Influence Vocation and Anxiety: The Sense of a Literary Career in the Sentimental Novel and Celestina "; W.J. Kennedy, "Versions of a Career: Petrarch and His Renaissance"; K. Bollard de Broce, "Judging a Literary Career: The Case of Antonio de Guevara"; A. J. Cruz, "Arms versus Letters: The Poetics of War and the Career of the Poet in Early Modern Spain"; A. Lake Prescott, "Divine Poetry as a Career Move: The Complexities and Consolations of Following David"; P. Cheney, "'Novells of his devise': Chaucerian and Virgilian Career Paths in Spenser's Februarie Eclogue"; F.A. de Armas, "Cervantes and the Virgilian Wheel: The Portrayal of a Literary Career"; A. Molina, "Epic Violence: Captives