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61. PART II OF The "Middle" Centuries Of Western Civilization - Western Civilization
or other materials pertaining to each specific author. ORB Online Medievaland classical Library Academic site, written and maintained by
http://www.omnibusol.com/mediev2.html
FROM BYZANTIUM TO THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
A WEB BOOK ON THE MEDIEVAL/RENAISSANCE/REFORMATION WORLD
PART II: FROM RENAISSANCE TO THE END OF THE 18TH CENTURY
Central Site Return Above
THE "BIG TEN" VERY SPECIAL PAGES
Virtual Renaissance - A Journey Through Time - A SPECIAL SITE
For the Renaissance, spend a day on this site. "Travel back through time and space to a world completely different from your own. The incredibly creative " New Apprentices on The Way to Guild Hall." Stunning and remarkable project by the faculty and students of Twin Groves Junior High School really has no competition. If this level of writing and creativity is indicative of what young students can do, some of American education, at least, is producing miracles.
- SPECIAL CREATIVITY
Dawn of Man to Ancient Times. Gods, Goddesses, Vikings, Mongols. Dark Ages to Renaissance. King Arthur, Robin Hood, Crusades, Religion. Ships, and Sea. The Great Wars. History of Science and Medicine, resources for educators, students, reenactors. This site is like a whirlpool that can suck up a lot of your time!
Grover Furr's Medieval History and Literature Page - SPECIAL LINKS
Essential resource links located on this web site! Basic Medieval Resources on the Web, Chaucer, Middle English and Other Medieval Literatures, Journals and Criticism, History, Art, Music, and Culture. Medieval History Course by Paul Halsall of Fordham University presenting an excellent course outline summarizing "The End of the Classical World to the Later Middle Ages." If you can't find what you're browsing for on our fantastic site, Mr. Furr's reference of links is a great option.

62. English - Syracuse University Library
periods or genres, specific authors or works, electronic journals, etc. classical Studies, cultural studies, cyberculture, English and other
http://libwww.syr.edu/research/internet/english/metasites.htm
Other Subjects:
Subject Guides Africa African-American Studies Aging/Gerontology American Literature American Studies Anthropology Architecture Art Asian Studies Biology Business Chemistry Composition/Cultural Rhet Computer Science Drama Earth Sciences Economics Education Engineering English/Textual Studies European Studies Exercise Science Film Studies General Science Geographic Info Systems Geography, Human Geography, Physical Government History Information Studies International Relations Journalism Latin American Studies Library Science Linguistics Management Maps/Cartography Mass Communication Mathematics Music Native American Studies Nursing Photography Philosophy Physical Education Physics Political Science Psychology Public Administration Radio Reference Religion Science, General Social Science, General Social Work Sociology Television Women's Studies Writing Program
Metasites for English/Textual Studies
Gateway sites Literary history See also Gateways sites:
  • Eclat "The 'Essential' Comparative Literature and Theory Site."

63. Other Resources
author guides or other cumulative documents that deal with specific writers . Subjects include classical Biblical, medieval, Renaissance,
http://ccbit.cs.umass.edu/SchoolofEducation/Preservice/standardsconnector/tchrre
Teacher Resources Links: Lesson plan websites Search engines User-submitted lesson plans Other resources Other Resources for Teachers Arts Health Science (including nature) Teacher supplies ... Other
Arts
- return to top -
English
Digital Education Network: Online English Grammar
http://www.edunet.com/english/grammar/

Emphasis: This is a page on English grammar. Created by: Digital Education Network, a British company. Commercial status: commercial. Products for sale. Annotation: An on-line grammar book and useful grammar reference guide. Easy to find subjects, whether you're looking for the difference between who and whom, or for the usage of modal auxiliary verbs. Subjects are listed alphabetically for easy usage. This page is a part of the Digital Education Network and edunet.com. Pedro's Dictionaries
http://www.public.iastate.edu/~pedro/dictionaries.html

64. Courses
classical authors Plato s Republic (selections); Virgil s Aeneid. medieval writersSt. Augustine s Confessions and On Christian Doctrine; Aquinas Summa
http://www.artsci.lsu.edu/complit/courses.htm
Fall 2003 Courses
CPLT 7120:01
W 6-9
Scriptor Ludens: Italo Calvino and the Playful Side of Postmodernism Italo Calvino's poetics about how "the pleasure of fantasy lies in the unraveling of [...] solutions that keep some surprises up their sleeves," point to a literary system built on positive imagery (utopia worlds), ludic transgression, and enlightened fantasy METHOD OF EVALUATION
Oral Report 50% (Mid-semester)
Final written essay 50% (Last day of class) Method of instruction : Lecture/ Reading/ Discussion. Course will be taught in English and the reading material (primary and secondary sources) will be in English and/or available in English translation. Required text : Italo Calvino, The Uses of Literature Recommended texts : There will be additional theoretical reading material to complement the Calvino text. Additional reading will be included in the syllabus and students can read the material from the course packet. Professor John Mastrogianakos CPLT 7130:01
T Th 1:40-3
Teaching World Literature
Professor John Pizer CPLT 7130:02
T Th 12:10-1:30
Asian Literary Tradition
  • Close study of each text accompanied by ongoing view of the history and religious/philosophical traditions grounding the works In-class research reports, interpretive/critical papers

65. Courses Offered By The English Department
1) What is the nature, history and range of Peacenik lit? and reflects hispersonal and professional study of classical and medieval languages, myth,
http://rs6000.cs.lewisu.edu/~wielgoch/english/courses.htm
Fall and Summer 2005 English Department Course Schedule Please note: Any 200 or 300 – level literature course can be counted for general-education credit, but you may not enroll in a majors’ course without specific consent to do so. See the Department Chair or course professor.
SUMMER 2005
06-220-8 Topics in Literature: “Peacenik” Lit (3)
TWR 9-12:20
Pounds, B.
Prerequisite 06-111

In a long history of war, many authors have written against war yet are often overlooked when the side of “right” has told its history. This course seeks to explore these authors by reading and discussing the works of writers who have written most poignantly against war and its horror. This course will look at authors from many eras in search of what it means to de-glamorize war.
Course Objectives:
As a course that fulfills the University’s general education requirement for literature, English 220 is designed to meet the learning outcomes discussed in the English Departments’ general syllabus. This particular “Topics in Peacenik Lit” will also address the following questions: What is the nature, history and range of Peacenik Lit?

66. 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.

67. University Of Mississippi Libraries - English Literature Subject Guide
Covers highprofile authors from Chaucer to Stephen King. ORB The OnlineReference Book for medieval Studies www http//orb.rhodes.edu/ ORB is
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/files/subject/english-lit.html
LIBRARY QUICK LINKS AICPA Articles and Databases Blues Archive Circulation Course Reserves Distance Learning Gifts and Donations Gift Policy Government Documents Kudzu Library Jobs Library Map Library Search Engine Microforms/Media My Library Account Reference Department Research Help Science Library Staff Directory Visual Collections Writing Center
English/Literature Subject Guide
Quick Search (UM Students and Faculty Only) Title Keyword Keyword Author Subject Contemporary Authors Literature Online JSTOR Contemporary Literary Criticism MasterFile Premier MLA Academic Search Premier Electronic Databases Electronic Journals ...
Free Internet Resources
Electronic Databases
Subject Specific Databases
MLA Bibliography (Modern Language Association Bibliography)
Main resource for scholarly journal articles in literature and language, although it does not include classical literature. There is currently no full text available, but the article citations link to UM's library catalog so you can tell whether we have the journal the article is in or not. From 1963 to the present.
Literature Online
Literature Online includes full-text English and American poetry, drama and some prose up to about 1900, African-American poetry up to 1900, and some 20th century poetry. Additionally, it includes some full-text articles and criticism, biographical information, and links to websites about authors and their works.

68. The Ph.D. Program In Literature At The University Of Notre Dame Is
The authors will be read in pairings – Joyce and Conrad, Woolf and Bowen, Forsterand Ford. lit 73650 The medieval Book Calvin Bower 330445 TR
http://www.nd.edu/~litprog/coursedescr.html
Faculty Students Courses Director's Statement ... Home Course Descriptions-Fall 2005 Ph.D. In Literature
Course Descriptions Fall 2005
Students can take a minimum of three courses and a maximum of four, not including language acquisition courses. (Language classes do not count toward the 9 credit.) Every effort should be made to acquire language proficiency as early as possible. Please bear in mind, the language exams will be rigorous and must be satisfied by the end of the third semester of residence.
Students are required to consult with the Program Director/and or Director of Graduate Studies prior to enrolling in any course. Students should select their courses from the listings described in this booklet. However, in special circumstances and with prior authorization from the Program's Director and/or Director of Graduate Studies, graduate level courses not listed here can be taken for credit. Students are reminded of the Program's requirements in Core, Primary and Related Fields. With the advice of the Director/ Director of Graduate Studies, and/or advisors in their field students, will, at the appropriate time, be expected to demonstrate what constitutes Primary and Related fields of study.

69. Guide To Literary Criticism
Profiles 45 important Asian American authors of novels, short stories, the areas of classical and Biblical, medieval, Renaissance, Eighteenth Century,
http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/su/modlits/LitCrit.html
Search the Library catalog Cross-Search the Library website for in Keyword anywhere Title keyword Author keyword Subject keyword ISBN for in General Science Law for
Modern Literatures Guide to Literary Criticism
Print Resources

Electronic Resources

Print Resources Finding Books in the On-line Catalog: Search for holdings at all libraries of the University of Chicago Library System in the on-line catalog . For example, search under the following subject headings and their subheadings (the headings listed below are just a number of selected examples):
Criticism Germany History.

70. Literature (in English) Subject Guide : UVM Libraries
classical and medieval Literature Criticism (multivolume) Contemporary authors;A Bio-Bibliographical Guide to Current Writers in Fiction,
http://library.uvm.edu/guides/subjectguides/literature/
UVM Libraries
LIBRARY CATALOG COURSE RESERVES LIBRARY HOURS ... ABOUT
Literature (in English) Subject Guide
Major Reference Works
Indexes, Abstracts, and Full-Text Databases

Electronic Journal and Electronic Text Collections

Recommended Web Sites
...
Style Manuals

Full-text
Major Reference Works
General Sources
For an overview of a topic, an explanation of unfamiliar terms, or brief factual information on authors, genres, etc.. Some of the sources listed below provide general coverage, while others are more subject specific.
Cambridge Guide to Literature in English
REF PR 85 .C29 1993
Cambridge Guide to Women's Writing in English
REF PR 111 .C36 1999
Critical Survey of Long Fiction (8 volumes) REF PN 3451 .C75 2000 Critical Survey of Short Fiction (7 volumes) REF PN 3321 .C7 2001 Encyclopedia of Post-Colonial Literatures in English (2 volumes) REF PR 9080 .A52 E53 1994 Feminist Companion to Literature in English : Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present REF PR 111 .F45 1990 McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama (5 volumes) REF PN 1625 .M3 1984

71. Jewish Studies
History and Culture of the Jews The classical Period (Identical to History review of Jewish history in medieval and early modern Europe. Dist lit.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~reg/courses/desc/jwst.html
Skip to main content You may be using a Web browser that does not support standards for accessibility and user interaction. Find out why you should upgrade your browser for a better experience of this and other standards-based sites... Dartmouth Home Search Index Dartmouth Home ... Descriptions
Jewish Studies
Chair: Annelise Orleck Professors S. Ackerman (Religion), H. M. Ermarth (History), L. H. Glinert (AMELL), R. M. Green (Religion), L. D. Kritzman (French), T. H. Luxon (English), A. Orleck (History), B. P. Scherr (Russian), C. S. Wilder (History); Associate Professors E. Z. Benor (Religion), S. Heschel (Religion), I. Kacandes (German), A. Merino (Spanish and Portuguese), A. K. Reinhart (Religion), I. T. Schweitzer (English), M. F. Zeiger (English); Assistant Professor V. Fuechtner (German); Senior Lecturer B. S. Kreiger (English); Lecturers M. A. Bronski (Women’s and Gender Studies), S. E. Kangas (Art History), E. Rota (French and Italian); Visiting Brownstone Professor I. J. Yuval; Brownstone Post-Doctoral Fellow O. Kamil; Visiting Harris Professor C. von Braun; Visiting Professor K. Milich; Visiting Assistant Professor J. Karp; Adjunct Professor A. Lelchuk (Liberal Studies); Adjunct Assistant Professor M. B Brown. The Jewish Studies Program serves to provide a multi-disciplinary focal point for the various courses in Jewish history, religion, literature, and culture that are given at Dartmouth as well as to sponsor special course offerings (including those by the annual Brownstone Visiting Professor) and a variety of academic activities related to the discipline. The program currently offers a minor.

72. Class-Related Guides For Library Instruction
Luminarium is a collection of links to medieval, Renaissance, and 17th Centuryliterature. Resources for specific authors, Works, or Time Periods
http://library.csumb.edu/instruction/classes/hcom427.php
Information Competence Tutorials Information Competence at CSUMB How Do I... Request Instruction HCOM427: Survey of British Literature Library Home Page
Find Books

At CSUMB

Other Libraries
...
CSUMB Home Page

The following is a list of resources useful for conducting research in the the area of British Literature. Resources mentioned include print materials available at the CSUMB Library, electronic databases available to CSUMB students, and World Wide Web resources available from any computer. CSUMB Library resources can be accessed through the library website: . Note that most electronic resources are restricted to CSUMB students. For instructions on accessing restricted electronic databases when not in the library, see Using CSUMB's Proxy Server from the IT website. Resources For Criticism and Reviews General Resources for Authors and Biographical Information Resources for Specific Authors, Works, or Time Periods Reference Resources
Resources for Criticism and Reviews
  • Selected Print Resources
    • Contemporary Literary Criticism . Detroit, Gale Research Co.

73. Literary Resources: Search Result:
A match on http//andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/lit/medieval.html AmericanAuthors on the Web (Japan) Extensive index of authorspecific pages.
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/cgi-bin/lit.cgi
Search Result: ""
I hope to work out a more impressive search engine one of these days, but this will do the trick for now. Note that some entries may appear more than once: for instance, when they're found in both a regular page and the What's New page. Send comments and questions to jlynch@andromeda.rutgers.edu A match on http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/18th.html NOTE: Your subject may be included in my eighteenth-century page , a separate archive. A match on http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/20th.html
This page is part of the Literary Resources collection maintained by Jack Lynch Comments and suggestions are welcome.
Twentieth-Century Literature
Calls for Papers
From Penn's list. The best set of links.
Literary Women of the Left Bank (Paula DiTallo)
On-line magazine on early Modernism, especially women in Paris, 1900-1940, but with broader coverage than the title suggests.
Modern Fiction Studies (Purdue)
Information on the journal.
Modernism Timeline, 1890-1940 (John Mark Eckman)
Year-by-year list of literary and historical events.
Postmodernism is/in Fiction (Pomona)
Original essays and links on Acker, Auster, DeLillo, Garcia Marquez, Gibson, Hagedom, Morrison, Powers, Pynchon, Reed, and Rushdie. Some aren't yet available.

74. LITERATURE
lit 204A Comparative literature I Introduction to medieval lit We will endthe course by reading two 15thcentury authors, Christine de Pizan,
http://inside.bard.edu/academic/courses/fall97/lit.htm
LITERATURE
COURSE OFFERINGS FOR FIRST-YEAR STUDENTS Literature I:
A student planning to major in the Literature or Writing Programs must take one Literature I course, usually in the first year. Sophomores who have not yet taken Literature I have three sections which give them priority in registration, listed first below. Students exploring literature are welcome in the courses if places are available. Other Courses: Any course at the 100 level and many courses at the 200 level are open to first-year students.
LIT I A Literature I: Eliot and James
Professor: D. d'Albertis CRN: Distribution: B Time: W F 2:50 pm - 4:10 pm OLIN 201 Cross-listed: Victorian Studies
Close reading and textual analysis of Eliot's Daniel Deronda and Henry James's Portrait of a Lady . Frequent papers will be assigned.
LIT I B Literature I: Anna Karenina
Professor: E. Frank CRN: Distribution: B Time: W 1:20 pm - 3:20 pm ASP 302 Cross-listed: Russian and Eurasian Studies
Through a semester devoted to the "close reading" of the novel, students will be introduced to the study of fiction. Discussion will include the concepts of genre, convention, and style, "the rhetoric of fiction" and problems of narration. The topic of "realism" in Western literature will go hand in hand with specific questions about the novel's relationship to nineteenth-century Russian, French and English fiction and will address such questions as the conflict between morality and empathy, and differences between novels of psychological analysis and novels of social criticism.

75. Untitled Document
lit 143 classical Drama The course concentrates on the classical drama of the lit 182 medieval literature An intensive study of representative works and
http://www.ateneo.edu/depts/english/course1.htm
AB Literature
Course Offerings
Lit 101 Advanced Expository Writing
This course aims to introduce the students to the different forms of the essay. The endpoint will be the writing of a critical paper on a book of essays and a class presentation of ideas gleaned from the essays read in class.
Lit 112.1 Classical to Modern Literary Criticism
This courseintroduces the literature major to literary criticism from five Western periods: the Classical Age, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, the Age of Enlightenment, the Romantic Period, and the Modern Age. Students will be asked to read and discuss representative texts from each period. Theories derived from these texts will be used to analyze selected literary texts through class discussions, examinations, and critical essays.
Lit 112.2 Contemporary Literary Criticism
This course introduces the literature major to literary criticism from seven critical movements of the contemporary period: Russian Formalism, New Criticism, Reader-Response Criticism and Reception Theory, Psychological Criticism, Marxist Criticism, Structuralism, and Post-structuralism. Students will be asked to read and discuss representative texts from each movement. Theories derived from these texts will be used to analyze selected literary texts through class discussions, examinations, and critical essays.

76. Subject Reference: Languages And Literature
This site is a searchable index, by author or by title, literature criticismseries are available at FLITE classical and medieval Literature Criticism,
http://www.ferris.edu/library/Subject/lit.htm
Subject Reference: Languages and Literature
Choose Topic to Page Down General Sources Associations Databases Children's Literature ... Print Sources General Sources
Gale Literary Index

This site is a searchable index, by author or by title, to the many literature-related sources published by Gale Group. The following Gale Group literature criticism series are available at FLITE: Classical and Medieval Literature Criticism, Contemporary Literary Criticism, Dictionary of Literary Biography, Literature Criticism From 1400 - 1800, Nineteenth Century Literature Criticism, Poetry Criticism, Short Story Criticism, and Twentieth Century Literary Criticism. Other single-volume reference books indexed by this site may also be available at FLITE, check the online catalog using a title search. Also try the Literature Resource Center database which electronically reproduces much but not all of the content found in Gale's literary reference series. LibrarySpot: Literary Criticism
Hosted by the Northwestern University Evanston Research Park, LibrarySpot is an award-winning Internet portal containing hundreds of links to educational Web sites. The Literary Criticism page features links to several sites which contain extensive links to full-text literary criticism and biographical material available on the Web, including the Internet Public Library and Voice of the Shuttle Online Etymology Dictionary This site lists the origin and first written usage for thousands of words in the English language. One may either browse alphabetical sections of words or search for a specific word.

77. Courses In English, Lit & Film
lit 230. classical literature. Study of early or fundamental literature in avariety of cultures. lit 231. medieval and Early Modern literature
http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~english/curriculum.htm
Courses The following information should always be double-checked in the official John Jay College literature. WRITING COURSES Please note that writing courses are listed under "English" in all department course listings and college catalogs ENG 012 and 013 are reserved for students whose native language is not English and whose placement scores indicate their need for the intensive preparation these courses provide. ENG 012 English as a Second Language In this high intermediate course, students review sentence structure and work toward perfecting English paragraph composition. Additionally, they begin to learn to draft simple narratives. Journals are required in response to all readings, which are carefully selected literary pieces on social topics. The course stresses grammar, reading, and writing skills development, along with test taking, using readings that emphasize sociological themes, situations and terminology. Prerequisite: Direct placement through testing by the ESL Resource Center. 9 hours, 3 credits. 9 lab hours per semester. ENG 013 English as a Second Language This advanced ESL course prepares students for English 100 and 101 by offering intensive instruction in grammar, reading and writing skills development, and test taking. In bringing students to competence in college level work, the course incorporates reading with criminal justice themes in its English language curriculum and asks students to analyze these readings both orally and in writing. In the latter, students will move from simple to more sophisticated narrators and will ultimately learn to write argumentative essays. Prerequisite: English 012 or direct placement through testing by the ESL Resource Center. 9 hours, 3 credits. 12 lab hours per semester.

78. IPL Online Literary Criticism Guide
It also categorizes some good sites on literary periods from medieval through century authors, including some classical Roman and Greek writers.
http://www.ipl.org.ar/ref/litcrit/guide.html
the Internet Public Library
Online Literary Criticism Guide
Good literary criticism can be one of the hardest kinds of information to find on the Internet. Although there are many sources of online author information, it can often be difficult to find authoritative and critical works. To help you find the best information, we've collected and described some of the best starting places for finding online critical writing. This resource is particularly good for finding information on English-language authors, but also includes many authors whose works have been translated into English. If you find good guides to critical sites that we have missed, please let us know by emailing us at crit-url@ipl.org Best Starting Places Other Useful Starting Places Starting Places for Particular Time Periods
Best Starting Places
Atlantic Monthly Magazine search
http://www.theatlantic.com/search/
The Atlantic Monthly Magazine provides critical reviews of influential books; their website contains reviews dating back to the 19th century to show how authors were received by their contemporaries. Use their search engine to find old articles about your author. Literary Resources on the Net
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/

79. LII - Results For "literature"
Literature see also Literature Topics Page for specific kinds of literature Henry David Thoreau as well as an Online medieval and classical Library.
http://www.lii.org/search?searchtype=subject;query=Literature;subsearch=Literatu

80. Course Offerings
GEC arts and hums lit course. 372 Modern Arabic literature in Translation U 5 Advanced study of specific periods, authors and/or genres of prose writing
http://www.ureg.ohio-state.edu/courses/Spring/regional/Marion/book3/B064.htm

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