Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_C - Classical Medieval Lit General
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Classical Medieval Lit General:     more books (46)
  1. Languages Of Power In The Age Of Richard II by Lynn Staley, 2004-12-30
  2. Middle English Literature 1100-1400 (Oxford History of English Literature (New Version)) by J. A. W. Bennett, 1990-07-19
  3. Homeric Megathemes: War--Homilia--Homecoming (Greek Studies) by D. N. Maronitis, 2004-10-15
  4. Hunting in Middle English Literature by Anne Rooney, 1993-05-06

61. Graduate Curriculum In English: Basic Requirements
check with your advisor on this question. GROUP A GROUP B GROUP C. 602 OldEnglish 530 Rest. 18th Cent. 520 Southern lit. 643 classical/medieval lit.
http://www.selu.edu/Academics/Depts/English/gradenglish/degree.html
Graduate Curriculum in English at SLU: Basic Requirements Course work: 36 graduate credit hours Required Courses (All students) Theory and Methods Course: ENGL 447/518, 467/567 (L/L) or 448/548 (PW) (All students) Grad Writing Course: ENGL 475/575, 477/577 (L/L), or ENGL 485/585 (PW) Professional Writing Concentration: ENGL 486/586 Language and Literacy Concentration: 2 courses in Writing/Rhetoric or Linguistics Creative Writing Concentration: ENGL 482/582, ENGL 483, 583, ENGL 645 Thesis (6 credit hours) Required Thesis/Internship for Concentrations in Professional Writing, Language and Literacy, Required Thesis for Concentration in Creative Writing Optional Thesis for individual curricula **600-level courses (15 hrs w/Thesis, 18 hrs w/o Thesis) **500-level courses (sufficient to fulfill requirements for 36 graduate credit hours) **Graduate courses in a related field (up to 6 graduate credit hours) Foreign Language (12 undergraduate credit hours in 1 language) On standards for regular admission (required by the Graduate School by the time the student has completed graduate credit hoursÑ students must take the General Test of the GRE before they can qualify for regular admission) GPA and candidacy for the M. A.

62. Modern & Classical Lang & Lit Courses
undergraduate academics, Departments, Modern classical Lang lit Study ofthe growth of French literature from medieval times to current literary
http://www.spc.edu/departments/mod_lang/courses.shtml
MODERN LANGUAGE Ml250 Seminar: Pedagogy of Foreign Languages
Methods of foreign-language pedagogy, lesson planning, syllabi, classroom activities, and methods of evaluation. Taught in English; recommended for education majors and/or minors Ml258 The Baroque Aesthetic
Literature from the Age of Versailles, monarchy, and the Counter- Reformation. Excerpts from French, Spanish, and Italian literary works of the Baroque CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION Cc/So152 Introductory Anthropology
Basic concepts and methods and research findings in physical and cultural anthropology; kinship culture and personality, social organization. Cc/So180 Cultural Anthropology
An analysis of the development of anthropology as an offshoot from sociology; an examination of the differences in the methodology of anthropology and sociology in the study of a variety of cultures. Cc/Ar/Cu245 Classics and Film
Representation of the Greek and Roman past in film based on a comparative methodology of the two media and through reading of ancient texts.

63. ENG 310A Online Resources
medieval History and Culture (general, AngloSaxon, Celtic, post-Conquest) of the many stories from classical, Germanic, and other myths and legends)
http://clcgi.cl.msu.edu/~tavrmina/eng310a/SS99/online.htm
ENG 310A: On-Line Resources
Drawn largely from Professor L. M. Matheson's list of SELECTED INTERNET RESOURCES FOR EARLY, MEDIEVAL, AND RENAISSANCE BRITAIN , which provides still more interesting, useful, and fun sites. Not all the categories have sites listed yet, but I will occasionally add links as the semester continues. These resources are not required material for the course, but supplementary, intended to provide useful assistance or enjoyable further readings about things that catch your attention. I encourage you to surf around here as a way of becoming more familiar with electronic literary resources, from both professional and lay sources. You may find useful material on a given topic both under the general categories and under specific authors or periods and genres. To use this page effectively, you should not stop with the first thing you find, and you should try to evaluate the relative authority and likely value of sites you encounter. There are certainly many helpful sites posted by amateurs (in the best sense of the word) or as course projects and papers, but not everything on the Web is equally reliable and you need to read with an informed critical intelligence just as you do with print materials. Similarly, there are some unhelpful, esoteric, and incorrect materials posted to the Web by academic professionals, so you should evaluate what you find even in sites with ".edu" in the URL. Remember that anything you decide to use from the Web in any piece of writing must be cited appropriately, just as with print materials. Not doing so constitutes plagiarism, which carries serious academic penalties. Remember that sophisticated search engines, used correctly, can make it even easier to identify Web sources than sources in print, if passages or papers have the flavor of plagiarism. Don't even

64. The University Of Michigan Ann Arbor (StudentsReview) -
general info(734) 7641817 Financial aid office(734) 763-6600 lit.Ancient/medieval, Romance Languages and literatures Other, Slavic Lang. lit.
http://www.studentsreview.com/MI/UMAA_i.html
StudentsReview :: The University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Home Faq Press Search for University > Rate Umich > Upload a Pic! > Rate Your Umich Professors Random Quote:
education Read full comment Similar Schools Michigan State University East Lansing, MI
Harvard University Cambridge, MA

New York University New York, NY
Summary ... My Chances The University of Michigan Ann Arbor - Survey Umich - Critique Umich
Undergraduate

Graduate

Alumni
... Describe your Major Featured My Chances? EssayEdge.com Admissions Essay Help Parents, Advance your education Student Loan ... Loan Consolidation Summer HS Summer Programs Internship Post Advertisement Location/Contact
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN-ANN ARBOR
ANN ARBOR, MI 48109
General info:(734) 764-1817 Financial aid office:(734) 763-6600 Admissions office:(734) 764-7433 University Homepage Tuition + Room Instate: $7,485 Out-of-State: $23,365 Application Fee: $40.00 University Makeup # of Undergrads: 24,547

65. The University Of Iowa (StudentsReview) -
Teach Educ, Science Teacher Education general, Special Education general, lit. Ancient/medieval, Italian Language and literature, Latin Lang. lit.
http://www.studentsreview.com/IA/UI_i.html
StudentsReview :: The University of Iowa
Home Faq Press Search for University > Rate UI > Upload a Pic! > Rate Your UI Professors Random Quote:
education Read full comment Similar Schools Arizona State University Tempe, AZ
Alabama State University Montgomery, AL

George Washington University District of Columbia, DC
Summary ... My Chances The University of Iowa - Survey UI - Critique UI
Undergraduate

Graduate

Alumni
... Describe your Major Featured My Chances? EssayEdge.com Admissions Essay Help Parents, Advance your education Student Loan ... Loan Consolidation Summer HS Summer Programs Internship Post Advertisement Location/Contact
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
JESSUP HALL
IOWA CITY, IA 522421316 General info:(319) 335-3500 Financial aid office:(319) 335-1450 Admissions office:(319) 335-3847 University Homepage Tuition + Room Instate: $4,191 Out-of-State: $13,833 Application Fee: $30.00 University Makeup # of Undergrads: 19,603 # of Grad students: 9,165

66. UCSC General Catalog 2003–04
Office of the Registrar UCSC general Catalog readings in masterpieces ofclassical, medieval, early modern (Renaissance), and neoclassical literature.
http://reg.ucsc.edu/catalog/archive/litPS.html

Programs/Courses
Catalog Home Schedule of Classes Registrar Home ... UCSC Home Literature Faculty Course Descriptions Kresge College
humwww.ucsc.edu/Lit/index.html
Program Description Literature at UC Santa Cruz is taught through a single Literature Department, rather than through separate departments of English, French, Spanish, etc. This structure fosters innovative and comparative approaches to literature among both faculty and students. Courses in the major encompass traditional literary history and interpretation as well as cross-cultural inquiry and current theoretical debates. The literature major also permits focused work in national literary traditions. Students may concentrate in American, British, or all English literatures; in French, German, or Italian; in Latin and/or Greek; or in Spanish/Latin American/Latino literatures. Alternatively, students may organize their studies by period. Pre- and early modern studies focuses on early literary traditions from antiquity through the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the neo-classical period, while modern literary studies concentrates on literature of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. Finally, the world literature and cultural studies concentration is dedicated to non-Western literatures and literature in a global context.

67. University Of West Florida Catalog
Reading/discussion of major literary texts from the classical period to theRenaissance (general Studies Course HUM/lit), (Gordon Rule Course Wrtg)
http://uwf.edu/catalog/lit.htm
2005/2006 Catalog
University of West Florida
uwf.edu
Table of Contents

Welcome

Telephone Directory

Academic Calendars
Year 2005/2006

Fall Semester 2005

Spring Semester 2006

Summer Semester 2006
...
Index
Course Listings/Descriptions LIT-LITERATURE LIT 1110 Great Books I . . . . . 3(F,S) Reading/discussion of major literary texts that have shaped Western culture and civilization. (Gordon Rule Course: Wrtg) and (General Studies Course: HUM/LIT) LIT 1120 Great Books II . . . . . 3(CALL DEPT) Reading/discussion of major literary texts that have shaped Western culture and civilization. (Gordon Rule Course: Wrtg) and (General Studies Course: HUM/LIT) LIT 2010 Introduction to Prose Fiction . . . . . 3(CALL DEPT) Short stories and novels are selected to represent a diversity of national and historical origins, showing how works of fiction have both reflected and reshaped their own time. (Gordon Rule Course: Wrtg) and (General Studies Course: HUM/LIT) LIT 2030 Introduction to Poetry . . . . . 3(F) Elements of poetry, terminology of poetics and the poetic process. Writing of short analytical papers. (Gordon Rule Course: Wrtg) and (General Studies Course: HUM/LIT)

68. University Of West Florida Catalog
(Gordon Rule Course Wrtg) and (general Studies Course HUM/lit) Meets Reading/discussion of major literary texts from the classical period to the
http://uwf.edu/catalog/cat2004/lit.htm
2004-2005 CATALOG Table of Contents
Welcome

Telephone Directory

Academic Calendars
Year 2004/2005

Fall Semester 2004

Spring Semester 2005

Summer Semester 2005
...
Index
Course Listings/Descriptions
Semester offering codes corrected and posted on June 7, 2004. LIT-Literature
LIT 1110 Great Books I . . . . . 3(F,S)
Reading/discussion of major literary texts that have shaped Western culture and civilization. (Gordon Rule Course: Wrtg) and (General Studies Course: HUM/LIT) LIT 1120 Great Books II . . . . . 3(CALL DEPT) Reading/discussion of major literary texts that have shaped Western culture and civilization. (Gordon Rule Course: Wrtg) and (General Studies Course: HUM/LIT) LIT 2010 Introduction to Prose Fiction . . . . . 3(CALL DEPT) Short stories and novels are selected to represent a diversity of national and historical origins, showing how works of fiction have both reflected and reshaped their own time. (Gordon Rule Course: Wrtg) and (General Studies Course: HUM/LIT) LIT 2030 Introduction to Poetry . . . . . 3(F)

69. MEDIEVAL LANGUAGE AND LIT JANUARY 1996
medieval LANGUAGES, DICTIONARIES, GRAMMARS AND REFERENCE ML111 BOLGAR, RRTHE classical HERITAGE AND ITS BENEFICIARIES Cambridge, 1958 CUP Reprint.
http://www.cyberus.ca/~rrknott/medlit.html.html
MEDIEVAL LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
THIS LIST IS DIVIDED INTO SOME SPECIFIC TOPICS AS WELL AS A GENERAL SECTION LISTED ALPHABETICALLY BY AUTHOR. YOU CAN CLICK ON THE TOPIC TITLE IF YOU WANT TO GO DIRECTLY TO A TOPIC MEDIEVAL LANGUAGES, DICTIONARIES, GRAMMARS AND REFERENCE ANGLO-SAXON TEXTS INCLUDING BEOWULF BRITISH MUSEUM MS. COTTON NERO A.x. CHAUCER DANTE ... GENERAL INCLUDING MIDDLE ENGLISH AUTHORS, CONTINENTAL AUTHORS ETC. ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED BY AUTHOR
MEDIEVAL LANGUAGES , DICTIONARIES, GRAMMARS AND REFERENCE
ML1 ALSTON, R.C. AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH Toronto et al. (1968) Copp Clark. 167 (3)pp. Red wraps. Monochrome frontispiece and 3 Illustrations. Very Good. $10.00 ML2 ANDREW, S.O. SYNTAX AND STYLE IN OLD ENGLISH Cambridge, 1940 C.U.P. 112 pp. Red cloth. Index. Very Good in slightly worn dust jacket. $20.00 ML3 ANGLADE, Joseph GRAMMAIRE ELEMENTAIRE DE L'ANCIEN FRANCAIS Paris (1965) Librairie Armand Colin. 247(1) pp. White paper wraps. Wraps creased else Very Good. $10.00 ML4 BROWNE, R.A. BRITISH LATIN SELECTIONS: A.D. 500 - 1400. Oxford, 1954, Basil Blackwell. 144 pp. Blue cloth. Very good in like dust jacket. $20.00

70. Library - Internet Sites By Subject: Literature - Vanguard University
Child lit An electronic discussion list on children s literature InternetClassics Archive Library of Congress classical and medieval History Links
http://www.vanguard.edu/library/subjectswww.aspx?doc_id=319

71. Transfer Equivalency Information
230 classical CULTURES HU102 HUMANITIES classical CULTURE ENGL 231 medieval HU103 HUMANITIES medieval RENAIS ENGL 261 BRIT lit/MED RENAI EN200
http://www.ksu.edu/admit/dars/colby_cc_c.html
Date Updated On the Web : 3/3/2005
Date Extracted : Mar 3 2005
Home
Search

72. Whitman College
GENS 153 198201 classical Greece CLAS 100T Arts Letters Group (AL) Wlit 237199601 Masterpieces medieval lit ENG 100T Arts Letters Group (AL)
http://duckweb.uoregon.edu/pls/prod/bwsktrfr.P_PrintCatalog?sbgi_code=003803

73. Gen Ed Comparison
Students who choose to use quarter system requirements for general education classical and medieval Eras (3) Hnrs HU2120 Intellectual Traditions
http://documents.weber.edu/catalog/0102/pages/gecomp.htm
Semester Equivalent Courses for Quarter
System General Education Requirements
Students who choose to use quarter system requirements for general education and/or major/minor must finish their AS/AA (associate degree) by Summer 2001, and/or their BS/BA (baccalaureate degree) by Summer 2001. After those dates, the window for the last quarter catalog (1996-98) will expire and students will be required to choose a semester-based catalog from which to complete degree requirements.

Quarter System General Education
Semester System Equivalent Courses
Core Requirements ENGLISH: EN111 and EN112 with a C or above. THE STATE REQUIREMENT
one of the following:
  • Hist SB170 or Polsci SB110 or Econ SB274.
    Present advanced placement credit in American History or suitable transfer courses from
    other institutions. Pass a special examination available in the WSU Testing Center.
  • MATHEMATICS COMPETENCY
  • ACT of 19 or above on the Math portion
    Math Competency exam score of 19 or above. C or above in Math 105, Intermediate Algebra, or any mathematics course having Math 105
  • 74. Schedule Homepage
    1992/93 To Present general Education Pattern Proseminar In Drama lit.ENGL 190V*. Great Drama On Video medieval Culture. HRS 132*. Renaissance
    http://www.csus.edu/schedule/Fall2005Spring2006/geareac.stm

    Index
    Fees Calendar Registration ... Campus Map
    To Present General Education Pattern You must complete a total of 51 units distributed among the Areas specified in this pattern. At least 9 units must be in upper division courses (100-199). Enrollment in upper division GE courses is limited to students who have completed Areas A1, A2, A3 and have taken at least 45 units (not limited to GE classes). At least nine units of GE must be taken in residence (i.e., at CSUS). ** Students with catalog rights prior to Fall 1992: The list of approved courses for the 1983/84-1991/92 GE pattern is no longer published in the Class Schedule. If you need a course list, you may pick up a copy in the Academic Advising Center (LSN-1012) or at the Evaluations Office, Admissions and Records window (LSN lobby). Area A - BASIC SUBJECTS (9 units)
    Area B - THE PHYSICAL UNIVERSE AND ITS LIFE FORMS (12 units)

    Area C - THE ARTS AND HUMANITIES (12 units)

    Area D - THE INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIETY (15 units)
    ...
    Area E - UNDERSTANDING PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT (3 units)
    Area C: THE ARTS AND HUMANITIES (12 units)
    At least 3 units must be taken from Areas C1, C2 and C3. No more than two courses may be taken from the same major designation.

    75. English CALL Courses
    This 900 course examines works from three traditions the classical, the Oriental and images in a wide variety of texts ancient, classical, medieval,
    http://www.dawsoncollege.qc.ca/departments/core/english/cour_call.php
    Search WWW Dawson
    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
    Intro to College English (101)

    "Genre" Courses (102)

    "Theme" Courses (103)

    "Block B" Courses (BXE)
    ... Department Website
    CALL English Courses 603-XXX-DW
    603-421-DW
    Literary Criticism
    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
    History of English
    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.

    76. European Literature - Electronic Texts
    medieval texts from Ireland in several languages and newer texts in Irish andEnglish. classical Texts. Classics Etexts List of text collections.
    http://www.lib.virginia.edu/wess/etexts.html
    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
    Catalan Literature
    Textos en línia is a large collection of links to Catalan texts of all sorts.
    Danish Literature

    77. General Education Requirements Approved For Semester I 2005-2006
    CHEM 401 Introduction to Chemistry CHEM 403 general Chemistry CHEM 404 HUMA 510C Ancient World HUMA 511C medieval World HUMA 512C Renaissance and Early
    http://unhinfo.unh.edu/registrar/geneduc/gelist.html

    78. Medieval Littera
    general Sites. Labyrinth Resources for medieval Studies http//labyrinth.georgetown.edu/ A comprehensive The Online medieval andClassical Library
    http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/fil/pages/listmedievalki.html
    Medieval Littera
    An Internet Hotlist on Medieval Literature created by Kimberly S Gay
    Nash Central High School Library Media Center Introduction General Sites Arthuriana Individual Authors ... Mythology
    Introduction
    In addition to using books about medieval literature, why not also use the power of the Internet? These links are divided into five categories and you will find biographies, criticism, on-line texts, and links to other useful sites.
    The Internet Resources
    General Sites
    • Labyrinth: Resources for Medieval Studies - http://labyrinth.georgetown.edu/ A comprehensive resource for Medieval Studies: bibliographies, European cultural studies, pedagogical resources, professional information and organizations, electronic texts, music.
    • NetSERF: The Internet Connection for Medieval Resources - http://www.netserf.org/ NetSERF is an extremely thorough and extensive database of information on any and all aspects of medieval society and its culture. It includes search engines and a fantastic glossary for obscure medieval terminology. It also includes an extensive bibliography of sources divided up by specializations. This includes everything from history to literature to legends and more. Other links include full texts of works by medieval authors, links to web pages about those authors, and other links to electronic collections of medieval works.
    • Literary Resources: Medieval - http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/medieval.html This page is part of the Literary Resources page maintained by Jack Lynch of RutgersNewark.

    79. British Lit: Middle English
    AngloSaxon and medieval lit at Indiana University The Online medieval andClassical Library a collection of some of the most important literary works
    http://www.thesink.ca/British Literature/BritLit Tables/britishlit_middleenglish
    British Literature Middle English
    Old English

    Middle English

    The Renaissance (and Reformation)

    The Restoration
    ... NetSERF: Medieval Literature by Author Works organised by author plus search. Luminarium: Anthology of Middle English Literature (1350-1485) The Orb, an online Reference Book for Medieval Studies
    Includes essays, bibliographies, images, documents, links, and other resources for medieval studies.
    Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Lit at Indiana University

    Voice of the Shuttle: Anglo-Saxon and Medieval English Literature
    Medieval British Literature at Google.com Internet Medieval Sourcebook Includes both excerpts and full texts of medieval literary works. The Online Medieval and Classical Library a collection of some of the most important literary works of Classical and Medieval civilization. The Middle English Collection Online texts at the Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia. The Medieval Review Reviews of current work in all areas of Medieval Studies; browse or search. Middle English Dictionary Ongoing project offering analysis of lexicon and usage for the period 1100-1500.

    80. English Literature On The Web
    general Concordances British Authors Etext Archives medieval ( Anglo-Saxon)17th Century ( Renaissance) 18th Century ( Restoration)
    http://www.lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/EngLit.html
    E nglish L iterature on the W eb Richard Redgrave, The Poor Teacher
    Shipley Art Gallery, Gateshead General
    Concordances

    British Authors

    E-text Archives
    ...
    American Authors
    Your suggestion of any useful sites related to English Literature would be appreciated. Please e-mail me This page has been accessed times since the counter was put in on 1 July 1996. ( Web-Counter Last updated: 10 January 2003.
    General

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-80 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter