Literature Resources On The Web Subjects covered include manuscript and medieval studies, philosophy, religion, Mississippi Review A Webspecific version of the magazine Mississippi http://www.lib.iastate.edu/collections/eresourc/lit.html
Extractions: Library Catalog e-Reference Sources e-Resources Catalogs of Other Libraries ... Parks Library Building The sources listed below represent some of the best current sources for literature. They contain numerous links to other websites which feature various aspects of the literary world. Indexes and Abstracts General Sources The Academy of American Poets Provides information of the goals of the Academy, membership requirements, American events and literary exhibits which are mini-anthologies. Exhibits are in two groups: historical exhibits (modernism, the Harlem Renaissance, British influences, etc.) and curated thematic exhibits (poems of work, poems of love, etc.) Alex, A Catalog of Electronic Texts on the Internet This collection of digital documents may be searched, displayed and downloaded. The scope of documents in the collection include items from American literature, English literature, and Western philosophy. Provides links to other electronic text collections. ASLE Online This is the website for the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, and it offers a wealth of material, including several online publications, calls for papers, conference proceedings, job listings, and useful links to other relevant websites. This is a must-visit site for students and researchers involved in the study of literature and the environment as they relate to each other.
European Literature - Electronic Texts Collections are listed more or less in order of size; indivdual authors are medieval texts from Ireland in several languages and newer texts in Irish http://www.lib.virginia.edu/wess/etexts.html
Extractions: Electronic Text Collections in Western European Literature Catalan Danish Dutch Finnish ... Swedish This page lists Internet sources for literary texts in the western European languages other than English. Translations are mentioned only when they are included in collections of original language texts, or when they are themselves of interest. Collections are listed more or less in order of size; indivdual authors are listed alphabetically. EuRoDocs lists many historical and social science texts in western European languages. If you put up an electronic text, find a collection that's not listed here, or find changes in one of the collections please let me know Textos en línia is a large collection of links to Catalan texts of all sorts. Selecció de Poesia Catalana
Lit Crit: Definition And Much More From Answers.com lit crit ( krit ) n. Informal. literary criticism. Later classical and medievalcriticism often focused on religious texts, and the several long http://www.answers.com/topic/literary-criticism-2
Extractions: Wikipedia literary criticism Literary criticism is the study, discussion, evaluation, and interpretation of literature . Modern literary criticism is often informed by literary theory , which is the philosophical discussion of its methods and goals. Though the two activities are closely related, literary critics are not always, and have not always been, theorists. Modern literary criticism is often published in essay or book form. Academic literary critics teach in literature departments and publish in academic journals , and more popular critics publish their criticism in broadly circulating periodicals such as the New York Times Book Review , the New York Review of Books , the London Review of Books The Nation , and The New Yorker Literary criticism has probably existed for as long as literature.
Something Specific One of the best collections of author pages on the web. The Online Medievaland classical Library @ Berkeley (DL SunSITE) http://www.colorado.edu/English/mispag/Web_Pages/specific.html
Extractions: The Missing Pages -Table of Contents Where in the Web is English Lit? - first page Searching the Web - second page Texts, Texts, Texts - third page Just for Kicks - fifth page Something Specific This page is separated into specific areas which come under the rubric of English Literature: American Literature, British Literature, Medieval Literature, Multicultural Literature, Gender and Women's Studies, Theory, and Grammar, Composition, and Rhetoric. A specific area can be accessed either by scrolling down the page or from The Missing Pages table of contents. For information on how to cite electronic sources, go to the citing electronic sources section of Helpful Hints. American Literature Literary Resources@ On-line Literary Resources American VoS English Literature: American How the Other Half Lives - hypertext editon of Jacob Riis' book: full text, including illustrations, of the 1890 edition. The Jack London Collection (DL SunSITE) - a great site for all things London.
Yale College Programs Of Study classical Languages literatures department home page Substitution permittedOne literaturetwo courses in the other lit at the 300 level or above for http://www.yale.edu/yalecollege/publications/ycps/chapter_iv/classical.html
Extractions: Director of undergraduate studies: Corinne Pache, 307 PHELPS, 432-9457, corinne.pache@yale.edu FACULTY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICAL LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES Professors Egbert Bakker, Victor Bers, Donald Kagan, Diana Kleiner, Christina Kraus, John Matthews ( Chair ), William Metcalf ( Adjunct Associate Professor Michael Anderson Assistant Professors Lecturers Serena Connolly, Veronika Grimm Senior Lector Ann Ellis Hanson The Department of Classical Languages and Literatures offers a major in Classics, a major in Classical Civilization, and (in conjunction with the Hellenic Studies program) a major in Ancient and Modern Greek. The diversity of subject matter covered by these majors makes classics an excellent partner in interdepartmental major programs. In addition, the study of Greek or Latin literature may be combined with the study of other languages and literatures in a Literature major. For details see the comparative literature track under The Literature Major . For courses in modern Greek, see under
Literature, Reading, Books Literature, Reading, Books, authors, Publishers, Reviews and much more medieval Literature and History Page valuable links and resources to help http://www.floridasmart.com/subjects/langarts_literature.htm
Extractions: Tracey Anderson Do you know of a Literature site that we missed? Click here to add a link Literature The 19th Century Literature Webring devoted to works of that era. ABELL: The Annual Bibliography of English Language and Literature scholarly articles, reviews and dissertations from around the world. A Brief Chronology of African American Literature - listing and links from the 1700's forward. American Literature Resource Guide - this is a great starting point for those interested in American Literature. Includes lots of links and bibliographies. American Women Writers 1890-1939: Modernism and Mythology
Internet Resources For Classics It has been designed to cover the ancient and medieval worlds. and InformationServers; EText Archives; Author specific, Projects and Web Sites, etc. http://www2.lib.udel.edu/subj/lanc/internet.htm
Extractions: "Argos is the first peer-reviewed, limited area search engine (LASE) on the World-Wide Web. It has been designed to cover the ancient and medieval worlds. Quality is controlled by a system of hyperlinked internet indices which are managed by qualified professionals who serve as the Associate Editors of the project. The same procedures that govern quality also serve to limit the scope of Argos to the ancient world."
UMKC Libs: Guide To Literature It provides author and subject access to essays and chapters in books, in world literature, including classical, medieval, and ethnic literatures. http://www.umkc.edu/lib/Instruction/MNLsubjguides/literature.htm
Extractions: Miller Nichols Library UMKC MERLIN Catalog Site Map Search Site ... Just for You Library Guide to Literature To Find Books To Find Articles Selected Journals Reference Sources ... Library Guides to Literature Resources Note: This page is dedicated to general resources for the study of literature on the web. Guides for other genres of literature can be found in the list of Miller Nichols Library Humanities Subject Guides Use the MERLIN Library Catalog and the MOBIUS Union Catalog to find resources relevant to your research. Relevant works can be found using subject headings (Library of Congress) such as: Materials relevant to the study of broader literary themes can be found using subject headings such as: To find the location of a book in Miller Nichols Library, see the Location Guide Return to top of page Remote (off-campus) access to databases is available only to UMKC students, faculty, and staff. All other users must access online resources within the Libraries. Begin searching by selecting a database. After selection you will be prompted to provide a
Penn's Page Of Arts And Literature On The Web lit Links. Alex A Catalog of Electronic Texts gophers Shakespeare Collections,Other Authorspecific Collections, Electronic Text Archives, http://penn.home.att.net/bookarts.htm
Extractions: Authors Galore! Bohemian Ink Books Online Authors (CMU) English Language Resources ... Libyrinth - 20th Century Joyce, Pynchon, Eco. Borges, Garcia, Kafka, at al. Online Literature (Classics) Classic Literature Online Louisa May Alcott, Hans Christian Andersen, Sherwood Anderson, Jane Austen, Lyman Frank Baum, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Lewis Carroll, Willa Cather, Kate Chopin, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Joseph Conrad, James Fenimore Cooper, Stephen Crane, Daniel Defoe, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, Bret Harte, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Homer, Anthony Hope, Washington Irving, Shirley Jackson, Henry James, John Milton, Friedrich Nietzsche, Baroness Emmuska Orczy, Edgar Allan Poe, James Whitcomb Riley, Sir Walter Scott, Mary Shelley, Frank R. Stockton, Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoy, Mark Twain, Jules Verne, Walt Whitman Poetry Archives Poets Online (U. Toronto)
Extractions: John B. Padgett, University of Mississippi LitLinks from Bedford/St. Martin's Press is a literature resource designed to accompany the various introductory and critical theory anthologies published by the press. As an ancillary product to the printed texts, it might be handy as a source of additional information on the web for students using those texts in a course, and the number of contemporary and less-familiar older authors represented in the main part of the web site make it potentially useful for others. The site's overall lack of depth, however, and lack of contextual information limit its usefulness as a serious tool for advanced research into American literature. The site's annotated links to other sites fall within two categories: genre listings of authors of that particular genre, and "other links," which includes links to "literary periods," "related texts," and "research room." Of these, "related texts" simply opens a page of brief descriptions of the literature texts published by Bedford, whereas "research room" opens a fairly comprehensive website in its own right designed to help students with various aspects of conducting and using research both online and off. Only "literary periods" opens within the "Litlinks" portion of the Bedford website. The literary periods covered are "Medieval," "Renaissance," "Eighteenth Century," "Romantic and Victorian," "Modern Literature: 1900 to 1945," and "Contemporary Literature: 1945 to present." A note indicates these links will open pages about the respective period rather than individual authors, but in several instances that is not the case. The "Medieval" page, for example, includes a link to "The William Langland Home Page," while the "Renaissance" page features links to "The Complete Works of Christopher Marlowe" and another site titled simply "Edmund Spenser." For the most part, though, the links in this section of the website are for period or other broad-range subjects.
Miami University: Documents And Policies: General Bulletin Study of Spanish literature of medieval period from Poema del Cid (12th Intensive study of a special problem or topic, a specific period, author, genre, http://www.miami.muohio.edu/documents_and_policies/bulletin06/courses/spn/
Extractions: Courses of Instruction SPANISH (SPN-Arts and Science; Department of Spanish and Portuguese) Note: Students with prior Spanish must take the placement examination before enrolling in any Spanish course. Once placed, students may not skip a course in the sequence leading to SPN 202. No student may take SPN 101, 102, 111, 201, or 202 for credit/no credit. 101, 102 Beginner's Course (4, 4) Objectives: to read and understand ordinary Spanish without translation and to speak and write it with increasing ability. 111 Intensive Review of Basic Spanish (4) Covers same material as SPN 101, 102. For entering students whose high school background in Spanish has not included all the basic grammar and whose preparation for enrollment in 201 is deficient. Upon completion of SPN 111, students enroll in SPN 201. Prerequisite: enrollment determined by placement exam. Credit earned in SPN 101 and/or 102 is considered duplication of credit. Advanced Courses 201, 202 Second Year Spanish (3, 3)
CLASSICS CLAS 322 Intellectual History of classical Greece (5) I S/VLPA Blondell specific course content determined by assigned faculty member. http://www.washington.edu/students/crscat/clas.html
Criticism And Book Reviews: range from classical, medieval, and Renaissance to Theory, Ethnicities, We offer fiction reading lists, book reviews, forthcoming titles, author http://www.techtrekers.com/HSeng.htm
Extractions: High School English/Language Arts Sites Authors and Their Works: American Authors on the Web a list of links 1550-1950 Chico High School Library Author Links F. Scott Fitzgerald by the University of South Carolina A collection of links organized for the use of C.H.S. English students, as they read Animal Farm, by George Orwell. Great Writers from Book Lovers many links to great writers web pages. To Kill a Mockingbird and Harper Lee - links to resources and writings. IQ Infinity: The Unknown James Joyce many great links about James Joyce Jack London Collection links about Jack London Life and Works of Herman Melville The Life and Works of Herman Melville is a publication dedicated to disseminating information about Herman Melville on the Internet and the World Wide Web. Mark Twain in Cyberspace - Here's our annotated list of some outstanding Mark Twain-related sites and other resources on the Internet. Mark Twain Resources On the WWW from about.com Pulitzer Prizes Steinbeck Research Center by San Jose State University To Kill a Mockingbird: Then and Now this website contains primary source documents, lesson plans, and student work.
Carroll College - Department Oflanguages And Literature Courses A study of our British literary heritage from the medieval and Renaissance tothe Age of This course focuses on a specific author, literary genre, http://www.carroll.edu/academics/langlit/courses.php
Extractions: home academics langlit Department of Languages and Literature English EN 101 Basic Writing 3 Cr. Covers the basic elements of writing: grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, paragraphs; also concerned with audience, voice, and techniques of generating and organizing ideas into an essay, as well as introduction to the library. Score on national exams determines placement. No pass/fail; does not satisfy CORE. Offered each Fall. EN 102 College Composition 4 Cr. A preparation for students to write within the larger academic community. It includes techniques of library research, a formal research paper, and a combination of lectures and small-group classroom instruction. Score on national exams (and diagnostic essay when necessary) determines placement. No pass/fail registrations. A required CORE course. Offered each semester. EN 200 Literary Studies 3 Cr. Required of all majors and minors in English, this course acquaints students with literature as both an academic discipline and an art by developing the analytical and critical skills required for more sophisticated readings of literary works. By studying the literary techniques of exemplary authors, students also discover ways in which attentive reading might stimulate and guide their own writing. Along with introducing students to the vocabulary and methods of reading literary works from psycho-analytic, feminist, historicist, reader-response, and other critical perspectives, the course provides training and practice in writing literary exposition. Does not satisfy CORE. Prerequisite: EN 102. Spring Semester.
Fall 2005 Courses - Graduate Courses Religious Literature and the Rise of Dissent in Late medieval England The authors will be read in pairingsJoyce and Conrad, Woolf and Bowen, http://www.nd.edu/~english/Courses-Fall2005-Grads.html
Extractions: T 6:30-9:00 For poetry students in the MFA program. The workshop will involve a great deal of close reading of texts as well as traditional workshopping of participant's poems, in order to help the students grow in both their understanding and control of the elements of their voice, with the hope that the students will have written by the end of the semester a small portfolio of work of magazine publishable quality. Poets we will read will include Kimiko Hahn, Nicanor Parra, Venus Khoury-Ghata, and Harryette Mullen, among others. In addition, to their portfolio, students must write a short critique in book review format, of one of the other participants in the workshop, as well as memorize a poem. ENGL 90091 Practicum: Literary Publishing
Fall 2002 Course Descriptions - Medieval Studies Institute medieval Studies Institute Ballantine 442 Indiana University F615 Studies inmedieval French lit. Lais, contes, dits et fabliaux (3 cr.) http://www.indiana.edu/~medieval/fall2002.htm
Extractions: Time: TR 2:30-3:45 P.M. Location: SE 009 Towards the end of the twelfth century, a Japanese aristocrat, lamenting the ruin he observed around him, sighed, "How few are the houses that were there of old. Great houses have crumbled into hovels and those who dwell in them have fallen no less. Truly it has become a warrior's world." The course carries Intensive Writing credit, so you can expect to do a lot of writing (and rewriting); credit is given only for MEST M200 or EALC E203 on this topic. COAS Intensive Writing Section This course has been approved for Cultural Studies credit. Jointly offered with EALC E203.
Literature Resources In general, to find books of literature criticism, search for the author or the From SunSITE at Berkeley, full text of numerous medieval and classical http://www.library.mcneese.edu/hum/litpage.htm
Extractions: Searching zora hurston (SUBJECT) will find books ABOUT Zora Neale Hurston The Reference Department in the library has a wide variety of reference sources that provide background information on a topic. In the Reference Department, you will find biographies of authors, information on book reviews, indexes to literary criticism, and literature encyclopedias and dictionaries. Ask at the Reference Desk for help in using reference sources.
English, Comparative Literature And Linguistics Department Comparative literature is the study of world literature without specific regard CPLT 110 Literature of the Western World from Ancient through medieval http://www.fullerton.edu/catalog/academic_departments/engl.asp
Extractions: Marlin Blaine, Cornel Bonca, Ellen Caldwell, Mary Kay Crouch, Angela Della Volpe, Sheryl Fontaine, Joanne Gass, Jane Hipolito, Susan Jacobsen, Joanne Jasin, Alan Kaye, Thomas Klammer, Deborah Lawrence, Mohsen Mirshafiei, Helen Mugambi, Franz Müller-Gotama, Keith Neilson, Irena Praitis, Sally Romotsky, Chris Ruiz-Velasco, David Sandner, Joseph Sawicki, Yichin Shen, Kay Stanton, Atara Stein, John White, Heping Zhao
New Page 1 GERMAN 318 (3)German medieval and Renaissance Literature The focus shiftsannually from the examination of a specific period or author to a study of a http://germanrussian.wlu.edu/german_course_listings.htm
Extractions: Home Department Faculty German Catalog ... Comments German Department Catalog listings (Department of German) Professor Crockett Professor Dickens Professor Kramer Major A major in German language leading to a Bachelor of Arts degree requires at least 39 credits as follows: 1. German 262 (or an approved substitute in German language or a cognate field), 311, 312, 325, 332 2. Six credits from German 303 or from German 301 and 302 3. German 347 or 349 4. Six additional credits in literature chosen from the following: German 313, 314, 315, 316, 318, 320, 321 (if topic is literary) 5. The remaining credits must be taken from a list of approved courses, available from the department, with no more than six credits in any one discipline. 6. Students must pass an oral and written proficiency examination conducted by the department before or during their last term prior to graduation. A major in German literature leading to a Bachelor of Arts degree requires at least 39 credits as follows: 1. German 262 (or an approved substitute in German language or a cognate field) and German 395 2. Six credits from German 303 or from German 311 and 312
Extractions: @import "/styles/markup-nonNS4.css"; Skip to Left Navigation Skip to Main Content get a library card? find a book? renew a book? reserve a book? research a topic? find a job at NYPL? volunteer for NYPL? support NYPL? rent space? order/license images? learn to read? learn English? find events? find exhibitions? find classes? connect with wireless? Using the Library Library Services Collections NYC Resources ... Mid-Manhattan Library These are rough indications of the scope and subject of our scholarly journals, kept on the 4th floor of the Mid-Manhattan Library. There are a number of indexes and periodical bibliographies, notably that of the Modern Language Association, which will expand and sharpen the subject matter of each journal. Most are indexed in the annual bibliography of MLA (if not, we will indicate), but there are other sources, including the LEO catalog record, which indicate where else a periodical is indexed, such as Project Jake at http://mercury.lib.sfu.ca/~tholbroo/sfujake/search.cgi