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         British Literature Shakespeare:     more books (100)
  1. Shakespeare's Festive Comedy by Cesar Lombardi Barber, 1972-07-01
  2. On Shakespeare and Early Modern Literature: Essays by John Kerrigan, 2004-04-15
  3. Macbeth by William Shakespeare, 2007-12-27
  4. Lectures on Shakespeare (W.H. Auden: Critical Editions) by W. H. Auden, 2002-09-09
  5. Shakespeare by Johann Gottfried Herder, 2008-03-20
  6. Guide To The Manuscript and Printed Books Of The First Folio Of Shakespeare by British Museum, 2005-03-01
  7. Tradition and Subversion in Renaissance Literature: Studies in Shakespeare, Spenser, Jonson, and Donne (Medieval and Renaissance Literary Studies) by Murray Roston, 2007-03-15
  8. Notes to Shakespeare, Volume 3 Tragedies by Samuel Johnson, 2008-01-10
  9. Notes to Shakespeare, volume 1 Comedies by Samuel Johnson, 2008-01-10
  10. Author's Pen and Actor's Voice: Playing and Writing in Shakespeare's Theatre (Cambridge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture) by Robert Weimann, 2000-08-15
  11. Major British Writers I, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Bacon, Donne, Milton, Dryden, Swift, Pope, Johnson, Boswell (Volume I)
  12. The Rhetoric of the Body from Ovid to Shakespeare (Cambridge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture) by Lynn Enterline, 2006-12-14
  13. The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare, 2007-12-27
  14. Readings on Julius Caesar (The Greenhaven Press Literary Companion to British Literature)

41. New Page 0
ENGL 4301 shakespeare. ENGL 4325 Composition Techniques. ENGL 4350 English StudiesThe Theory and ENGL 3304 EighteenthCentury british literature
http://english.utb.edu/Undergraduate Course Rotation.htm
[left.htm] Fall 2005 ENGL 3302 Literary Analysis ENGL 3312 Survey of American Literature I ENGL 3319 Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics ENGL 3330 English Grammar ENGL 4301 Shakespeare ENGL 4325 Composition Techniques ENGL 4350 English Studies: The Theory and Practice ENGL 3301 Medieval Literature ENGL 3322 Business Writing ENGL 3324 Victorian and Modern British Poetry ENGL 3346 Twentieth-Century American Novel ENGL 4324 Argument and Persuasion Spring 2006 ENGL 3302 Literary Analysis ENGL 3313 Survey of American Literature II ENGL 3319 Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics ENGL 3330 English Grammar ENGL 3331 History of the English Language ENGL 4325 Composition Techniques ENGL 4328 Introduction to English as a Second Language ENGL 3306 English Novel to 1900 ENGL 3309 Major British Authors ENGL 3322 Business Writing ENGL 4317 Literature by Women Fall 2006 ENGL 3302 Literary Analysis ENGL 3312 Survey of American Literature I ENGL 3319 Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics ENGL 3330 English Grammar ENGL 4301 Shakespeare ENGL 4325 Composition Techniques ENGL 4350 English Studies: The Theory and Practice ENGL 3304 Eighteen-Century British Literature ENGL 3322 Business Writing ENGL 4316 Mexican American Literature ENGL 4318 Science Fiction ENGL 4322 Creative Writing I
Spring 2007 ENGL 3302 Literary Analysis ENGL 3313 Survey of American Literature II ENGL 3319 Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics

42. British And American Literature 1900-Today Links
Although not limited to british literature, the site is easy to navigate and This site is not devoted to the literature but to shakespeare festivals
http://www.suite101.com/links.cfm/british_literature

43. Shakespeare's King Lear Questions For British Literature To 1760, Alfred J. Drak
English 211, british literature to 1760, a Cal State Fullerton course that coverstexts by Geoffrey Chaucer, Thomas More, Philip Sidney, William shakespeare
http://www.ajdrake.com/e211_sum_03/materials/authors/shakespeare_sq.htm
E211: British Literature to 1760 Shakespeare's King Lear Study Questions Home Syllabus Policies General Questions 1. How many different meanings for the term "nature" are developed in this play? Who articulates the various meanings? Are these significations kept distinct? Do they remain stable throughout the play? 2. The various characters try to assert control over the events of the play by using a number of different linguistic strategies. Try to keep track of these strategies. Act One 3. Does Lear's division of his kingdom in I.i remind you of a fairy tale? How so? Ignore the word "tragedy" in the play's title for a moment, and describe your expectations about how the story might end based on its beginning. 4. What, if anything, is the problem with Lear's early division of his kingdom? Does his behavior make sense? Why is he putting on such a public "show" in I.i? 5. And what about "poor Cordelia" in I.iis her bearing towards her father the king appropriate?

44. ____ For British Literature To 1760, Alfred J. Drake, Summer 2003, Cal State Ful
E211 british literature to 1760. Review Guide for shakespeare. Alfred J. Drake 423 UH TW 1245145 ajdrake@ajdrake.com. Home Syllabus Policies
http://www.ajdrake.com/e211_sum_03/materials/guides/ren_shakespr_review.htm
E211: British Literature to 1760 Review Guide for Shakespeare Home Syllabus Policies Richard Kroll, UCI This by no means represents a systematic guide to Shakespeare's plays, but comprises rather a series of devices by which to approach dramatic representation in general. If you ask yourself the questions below, you will be asking the right sort of questions; this guide does not provide you with ready-made themes. 1. Who is who in what play? Tabulate the characters in relation to each other. Some characters may represent a principle offset by others. 2. Break down events by each act and scene. Note the setting, who enters and exits, any soliloquies. Make a brief summary of what is said (key words, quotations). 3. Plot: How do characters' qualities match/comment on each other? High vs. low; balance vs. disequilibrium; moral vs. immoral, and so on. How many sub-plots are there? How do they reflect, qualify, or undercut one another? Pay attention to beginnings and endings. (see "scenes")

45. The Cultured Traveler Newsletter
Introducing Your Family to british literature The shakespeare connectioncontinues outside of London in Stratford Upon Avon, with the opportunity to
http://www.theculturedtraveler.com/Archives/Sep2004/Family_British.htm
Home
Themes

Destinations

Tourist Boards
... More Travel Stories Volume 6, September 2004 ISSN 1538-893X document.writeln FormatDateTime(Now,1) This Issue
Tourist or Traveler? Literature Tours - Host Review D.H. Lawrence in Taos The Literary Woman of Mountparnasse ... Calendar More British Articles: Great Britain - A Literary Tour Dream In the footsteps of Jane Austen The Bard’s Life Comes Alive The Cheltenham Festival of Literature ... Britain's Lake District National Park Some books you may also find helpful include: Once Upon a Time in Great Britain – A Travel Guide to the Sights and Settings of Your Favorite Children’s Stories by Melanie Wentz Storybook Travels Let’s Take the Kids to London – A Family Travel Guide by David S. White Kids’ London by Dorling Kindersley Travel Guides Take the Kids to London – Survive and Enjoy!

46. ENGLISH 307I, British Literature Survey I
ENGLISH 307I, british literature Survey I shakespeare did not inventpostclassical drama, and medieval plays, as we will discuss in class,
http://members.aol.com/mcnelis/307I.html
ENGLISH 307I, British Literature Survey I
This page was first posted on the Web on Sept. 6, 1997.
Last modified August 19, 2003.
This page is privately owned and on a commercial server. The views expressed here are mine, and do not reflect any official viewpoints of Wilmington College. My homepage, with links to my other classes and projects, is here
Please feel free to e-mail me at mcnelis@aol.com if you wish to contact me. These links provide a good deal of information on various aspects of the periods we are studying. I will be adding more material, as time permits, so as to provide a head start for those who wish to read up ahead of time on the later material. These pages represent only a tiny fraction of the huge amount of Web-accessible medieval material out there. The Voice of the Shuttle
The Shuttle
is perhaps the premier site for links to humanities scholarship, literary criticism, and theory on the Web. You may need to try more than once to get around incomplete/unfinished indexing, since the page is often under revision. Take some time to navigate its many sections and to see what they've got. NetSERF: Medieval Misconceptions
Misconceptions and prejudices concerning European medieval culture continue to endure year after year, originating largely in (1) Renaissance authors (Erasmus, Petrarch) who styled themselves as Romantic-age-type culture heroes who transcended their purportedly inferior predecessors, and (2) anti-Catholic prejudice, particularly in British scholarship up till the 20th centurysomething which unfortunately remains alive and well in America to this very day. Beyond that, it is often preserved in K-12 teaching materials derived from old books, or from books derived from older books. This link (above) helps to deflate some of the most common untruths perpetuated about the Middle Ages (itself a Renaissance label). Education majors take note;

47. Graduate Courses
Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists, excluding shakespeare. Readings ofselected works in british literature appropriate for secondary education,
http://artsci.shu.edu/english/graduate/g-courses.html
Search SHU Contact SHU SHU Directory myWEB@SHU ...
Undergraduate Courses

Graduate Courses
Dual-Degree B.A./ M.A.

Poetry-in-the-Round

Writing Courses

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Graduate Courses
ENGL 6010 Introduction to Literary Research
Prepares students to use the resources of the library, pursue different types of research in language and literature, and write effective papers embodying their findings. 3 credits.
ENGL 6111 Old English Literature
Old English literature with readings from selected texts. Emphasis on Beowulf. 3 credits. ENGL 6112 Chaucer Selected readings in Chaucer. 3 credits. ENGL 6113 Medieval Drama The English drama from its beginnings to the fusion of popular and classical elements in the Tudor period. 3 credits. ENGL 6114 Shakespeare to 1600 Study of the early poetry, sonnets, chief comedies, tragedies, and histories. 3 credits. ENGL 6115 Shakespeare from 1600 Major tragedies, histories, problem comedies, and romances. 3 credits. ENGL 6116 Renaissance Literature Major poetry and prose. Emphasis on Skelton, More, Sidney, and Spenser. 3 credits. ENGL 6117 Renaissance Drama Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists, excluding Shakespeare. 3 credits.

48. Perfection Learning: Parallel Text--British Literature
No other anthology makes british literature so accessible to all students. Sonnet 116 “Let me not to the marriage,” shakespeare
http://www.perfectionlearning.com/britlit/index.adp
Title Author Item No Subject Advanced Product Samplers and
Research Notes
Accelerated Reader ... About Perfection Learning Hardcover Book Add
Softcover Book Add
Teacher Guide Add
British Literature 449-1798
Enhance and extend your British Literature curriculum
Benefits
  • Units are organized by time-periods and correlate to the most frequently used British literature texts.
  • Succinct and compelling unit and selection introductions set the historical and cultural context.
  • Paragraphs and stanzas are numbered for easy reference.
Volume discounts do not apply to our economically priced Perfection Learning titles. Table of Contents

from Beowulf, Raffel, translator
from The Canterbury Tales, Chaucer, Coghill, translator
English Ballads, Anonymous
from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, The Gawain Poet, Gardner, translator

Whoso List to Hunt, Wyatt
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love, Marlowe
A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning, Donne Meditation 17, Donne On My First Son, Jonson Song: To Celia, Jonson To the Virgins to Make Much of Time, Herrick

49. Princeton University Press Sample Chapters In British Literature
british literature. Go to Listing of Sample Chapters by Book Title Edited byDeidre Lynch; Lectures on shakespeare. WH Auden. Chapter 1 Lecture 9
http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/chapters/subjects/enll.html
SEARCH:
Keywords Author Title More Options Power Search
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E-MAIL NOTICES
NEW IN PRINT E-BOOKS ... HOME PAGE British Literature Go to Listing of Sample Chapters by Book Title Return to Subjects Menu File created: 6/16/05 Questions and comments to: webmaster@pupress.princeton.edu

50. Princeton University Press Books In British Literature
A literature of Their Own british Women Novelists from Bronte to Lessing. The Sea and the Mirror A Commentary on shakespeare s The Tempest.
http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/catalogs/subjects/enll.html
SEARCH:
Keywords Author Title More Options Power Search
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E-MAIL NOTICES
NEW IN PRINT E-BOOKS ... HOME PAGE British Literature Go to Listing by Author Return to Subjects Menu File created: 5/16/05 Questions and comments to: webmaster@pupress.princeton.edu
Princeton University Press

51. Oxford University Press: Shakespeare
literature/English british literature shakespeare cover Add to Cart On shakespeare and Early Modern literature. Essays. John Kerrigan
http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/LiteratureEnglish/BritishLitera

52. UW English: English Major Course Requirements
electives in british literature. 438 british Drama 17501900 One additionalcourse in English literature before 1800, non-shakespeare (3 cr)
http://www.wisc.edu/english/undergrad/requirements.html
Department of English
Undergraduate Course Requirements
This outline details the requirements for the department's general literature major . Some major options have additional requirements. For more details about individual courses, please see the course descriptions page.
credit hours
Majors must take at least 9 intermediate or advanced courses, for a minimum of 28 credits. One course, selected from English 215, 216 or 217, must be taken in the 4 credit format.
course distribution
The classes are distributed as follows: 1. English 215: English Literature Before 1800 (3-4 cr) 2. English 216: English Lit. 1800 to the present (3-4 cr) and an elective in American Literature (3 cr)
OR
English 217: American Literature 1620 to present (3-4 cr) and an elective in British Literature (3 cr) electives in American Literature 509 Selected Major Modern American Poets
605 Outstanding Figure(s) in Early Am. Literature
606 Theme in Early American Literature
608 Colonial and Early Romantic American Literature
609 Major American Novelists
610 The American Short Story
611 Major American Prose Writers
612 Voices of American Humor
613 Major American Poets 618 Literature of the American Renaissance 619 Three American Novelists 621 Three American Authors Before 1865 625 Outstanding Figure(s) 19th C. Am. Lit.

53. Drama And Literature
The british Library Sound Archive s collection of drama and spoken performanceaudio recordings. Royal shakespeare Company Royal Society of literature
http://www.bl.uk/collections/sound-archive/drama.html
document.write(''); Home Collections Sound Archive print ... Listen
Drama and Literature
Gillian Anderson in The Sweetest Swing in Baseball by Rebecca Gilman, Royal Court Theatre, 2004
(Photo: Hugo Glendinning) The Drama and Literature section holds a unique collection of drama, including live performances from the Royal National Theatre, the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal Court Theatre, as well as recordings of poetry and literature in performance. Material is drawn from commercial releases, broadcasts, the BBC's sound archives and the Sound Archive's own live recording programme. Users of the Sound Archive services in the main British Library building at St Pancras are able to consult the British Library's very extensive collections of printed books and manuscripts in conjunction with the sound recordings. Listen to the sound samples on this page with the Real Audio player
Paul Robeson as Othello (1959)
Catalogue details This live recording comes from a Royal Shakespeare Company
production. With kind permission of the Governors of the Royal

54. Center For British Studies :: UC Berkeley Institute Of European Studies
Dept. of English; Earlymodern literature, especially shakespeare, Ian Duncan, Dept. of English; the novel, british literature and culture 1740-1900
http://ies.berkeley.edu/cbs/people.html
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This site provides the names, email addresses, and research interests of faculty, graduate students, visiting scholars, and others at UC Berkeley and area institutions affiliated with The Center for British Studies.
UC Berkeley Faculty Elizabeth Abel; Dept. of English; British modernism, gender studies, psychoanalytic theory, Virginia Woolf, visual culture; eabel@calmail.berkeley.edu Anthony Adamthwaite, Dept. of History; EU and European international relations; adamthwa@socrates.berkeley.edu Janet Adelman, Dept. of English; Early-modern literature, especially Shakespeare, Jews in early modern England, and British object-relations psychoanalysis; adelman@berkeley.edu Thomas Barnes, Dept. of History and Law; Britain since 1509: Tudor- Stuart England, English legal to 1700; Canada; European and American military history; barnest@law.berkeley.edu David Bates, Dept. of Rhetoric; 18th-20thc, Enlightenment thought and culture; political and revolutionary discourse;

55. English At Luther College
18thcentury british literature, the novel, literature and the politics of gender Medieval and Renaissance literature, shakespeare, poetry
http://www.luther.edu/learning/dept/engl.html
LUTHER COLLEGE Learning Academic Majors and Minors English
The English Major at Luther
Reading literature enriches your life. When you study novels, plays, poems, and essays, you come to know private worlds of anguish and joy which you might never otherwise encounterthe interior worlds of people from the past as well as contemporaries outside your daily world. You learn about public life, tooin familiar as well as unfamiliar culturesand you study the tensions between public and private. You learn the ways in which we are all alike and the ways we are all different. You learn the beauty and power of words, as well as how to use language to engage, to persuade, and to move audiences.
Learning to read literary works closely and carefully involves learning to write about what you readto write for your own understanding as well as for communicating your ideas and discoveries. These reading and writing skills connect people to each other. In our literature class discussions we talk together about what we have read and learned, and we read and critique each other's writing.
Luther's English department offers a variety of courses in literature, writing, film, and language. English majors and minorsalong with other interested studentsdiscuss and interpret past and present literary works from the Greeks to contemporary authors. Our courses include literature of the quest, women's literature, film, and stories of place, as well as the literature of particular cultures and traditions like English and African, and the diverse literatures of the American people. Some recent January courses have taken students to study these other literatures firsthandin South Africa, Ireland, and London.

56. Stanford University Department Of English
This major provides a focus in british and American literature with from 17501900 or American literature before 1900; One course in shakespeare
http://english.stanford.edu/ugrad.php?content=major

57. ENGL1500640: Masterpieces Of British Literature Information Page
She has been teaching shakespeare and british literature courses at CU since 1995.She also holds an MA in English literature from the College of William
http://webct.colorado.edu/public/ENGL1500640_B2/
About Your Instructor: Teresa Nugent Teresa Nugent earned her Ph.D. in Literature at the University of Colorado at Boulder , specializing in early modern English poetry, prose, and drama. Dr. Nugent's research interests include cultural and historical studies, including economic approaches to literary texts and the relationship between literary forms and the rise of capitalism. She has been teaching Shakespeare and British literature courses at CU since 1995. She also holds an M.A. in English literature from the College of William and Mary, and a B.A. in Anthropology from the University of Virginia . Dr. Nugent can be contacted via email at teresa.nugent@colorado.edu or through the WebCT mail system.
English 1500 Outline Unit One: The Medieval Period Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Unit Two: Renaissance Sonnets A selection of sonnets by Thomas Wyatt, Edmund Spenser, Philip Sidney, William Shakespeare, and John Donne.
Unit Three: Renaissance Drama Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice
Unit Four: Revolution and Restoration - the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Selections from the poetic works of Robert Herrick, Andrew Marvell, Katherine Philips, John Milton, Anne Finch the Countess of Winchilsea, and Alexander Pope.

58. Peninsula College | Literature Courses
Study of british literature from late 18th century to present. Includes Romantic,Victorian, and Modern literature 280 INTRODUCTION TO shakespeare
http://www.pc.ctc.edu/?pid=100814

59. University Of South Florida - Regional Campus In Sarasota Florida.
ENL 3230 british literature 16161780. ENL 3251 british literature 1780-1900.ENL 3273 british literature 1900-1945. ENL 3331 Early shakespeare or
http://www.sarasota.usf.edu/CAS/Programs/2 2english_literature.html

60. University Of South Florida - Regional Campus In Sarasota Florida.
ENL 3273 british literature 19001945 ENL 3331 Early shakespeare ENL 3332 Lateshakespeare ENL 4303 Selected Authors LIN 4671 Traditional English Grammar
http://www.sarasota.usf.edu/CAS/Programs/2 2prof_and_tech_writing.html

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