MLSG Panels 199?-1999 Yet it could also depart from specific authors to general panel will not be restrictedto studying medieval responses to classical authors, since the http://classics.rutgers.edu/mlsg/previous.html
Extractions: medieval scholarship. The panel will explore different aspects of this long tradition of exegesis and interpretation. Proposals on a variety of topics are welcome, and may include studies of the ongoing tradition of commentary on particular classical works or authors; of particular commentaries (published or unpublished); of the medieval scholia that were written
Humanities Courses is a broad study of classical, medieval, and Renaissance authors examined may includeYeats, Pirandello, Mann general and also with specific religious systems http://www.ihcc.cc.ia.us/ihcc/catalog/courses/hu.htm
Internet Ancient History Sourcebook: Studying Ancient History Library Texts of major Roman and medieval authors in Latin Loeb classical LibraryTexts in the Public Domain. Links to major sites related to specific areas are http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/asbook01.html
Extractions: Other History Sourcebooks: African East Asian Indian Islamic ... Help Studying History Human Origins Mesopotamia Egypt Persia ... Christian Origins See Main Page for a guide to all contents of all sections. Contents Adding More Texts Other Ancient World Resource Projects Using Primary Sources Back to Index Nature of Historiography See texts at Modern History Sourcebook The Need for Source Criticism: A Letter from Alexander to Aristotle? [At this Site] WEB The Black Athena Dispute [At Reed College]
Library District - Maricopa County some of the most important literary works of classical and medieval civilization. ElectronicPoetry Center Library brings you the work of specific authors. http://www.maricopa.gov/library/internet.asp?anchor=books
Extractions: CLASSICAL AND LATE-CLASSICAL LITERARY RELATIONS Cross-references included at the bottom of the page] 165. DEAN, NANCY. "Chaucer's Complaint: A Genre Descended from the Heroides." Comparative Literature 19 (1967):1-27. Surveys the complaint genre and suggests that Ovid's Heroides influenced Chaucer's Complaint of Mars. Chaucer's complaints to Pity, His Lady, and of Venus are conventional, but dramatic context enriches the complaint of the Black Knight in Book of the Duchess as Ovidian irony does the Complaint of Mars. 166. DEAN, NANCY. "Ovid's Elegies from Exile and Chaucer's House of Fame." Hunter College Studies, no. 3 (1966):75-90. Suggests that Ovid's Tristia and Ex Ponto "may have been an important influence" on Book III of House of Fame, both for specific details, and for the conceptions of Fame, Fortune, Rumor, and their relation to humans. 167. FYLER, JOHN M. Chaucer and Ovid. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1979, 216 pp. Compares Chaucer to Ovid, identifying their mutual appreciation of the "comic pathos of human frailty," and tracing how each explores this pathos through manipulation of biased or reductionistic personae. Offers Ovidian precedent for Chaucer's narrators, assessing their comic value and their relation to Chaucer's world view. In House of Fame, the narrator tries unsuccessfully to understand "structures that immediately fall apart." In Book of the Duchess and Parliament of Fowls, the narrators fail to understand the facts of nature. The narrator of Legend of Good Women retells stories, but Alceste forces him to leave out much of the traditional accounts. Identification with partisan actors limits the narrators of Troilus and Criseyde and Knight's Tale, and Canterbury Tales portrays several unresolved perspectives, including the Manciple's banality and the Nun's Priest's wry rhetoric.
Sites For Specific Fields In English The Online medieval and classical Libary(UC 12001499) (Bibliography); LabyrinthLibrary medieval Bookcase; to British Nineteenth-Century authors; Resources for http://www.uark.edu/libinfo/subject/english/specfields.html
Marist College : English Department For secondary criticism on specific authors, scroll down to Journals and Criticismat the bottom of the page. The OnLine medieval and classical Library A http://www2.marist.edu/humanities/english/anglomed.html
Extractions: Medievalists were among the first scholars to recognize the potential of the Web for research and teaching, and there are an amazing number of sites in this field. Accordingly, the following list is not meant to be exhaustive. A caveat regarding the annotations of the sites: I am not a medievalist and I have very little background in the field (two graduate courses under the late Jesse Bessinger of NYU , a wonderful teacher). As such, this list simply presents what I hope are fairly useful resources with some comment as to what is available. Tom Goldpaugh Calls for Papers UPenn English Department Conferences ... Secondary Criticism Meta-Indices The Labyrinth : This is the most inclusive site in Medieval Studies. A project based at Georgetown University it includes text archives, pedagogical resources, articles, and innumerable links. It is the starting place for research on the web in Medieval Studies. ORB : This project, housed at the University of Kansas is The Online Resource Book for Medieval Studies (ORB). It describes itself as "a cooperative effort on the part of scholars across the internet to establish an online textbook source for medieval studies on the World-Wide Web." So far, it has developed an extensive and well-done collections of links to the participants, to on-line texts and to an amazing array of resources from around the Web. This collaborative effort utilizes one of the most important pedagogical applications of the Web. An excellent resource, it is different from but on a par with
English CALL Courses they encountered in Literature and Art Survey 1 classical, medieval/renaissance,enlightenment 603941-DW Literary Translation specific authors In this course http://www.dawsoncollege.qc.ca/departments/core/english/cour_call.shtml
Extractions: Powered by Prospective Students Current Student Prospective Employees Corporate Visitors ... Phone Directory Quick Links Academic Calendar Grades Online Cancelled Classes ISEP Library Parc/Athletics Clubs Student Union Reach For The Top! DOLRS Work Requests Class Lists Dawson Intranet Docushare Employee Benefits Faculty Schedules Web Mail PMS BACK HOME ENGLISH DEPARTMENT Introduction ... Faculty List Courses In this course students will consider some of the topics that have shaped the discourse of arts and letters. These topics will be selected to coordinate with the topics for the third-semester Essay course. In each semester, at least three topics will be selected. [See the English Department's "Critical Topics" List.] Through the study of literary criticism, students will learn to analyse and interpret an artistic or literary work as well as to form and justify a critical judgment about the work using appropriate criteria ; they will also learn how to present their critical and interpretive views clearly in an MLA-format critical essay. 4 hrs. per week. 603-431-DW In this course students will learn about the origin and the development of the English language and will apply their knowledge to the criticism of literary texts in English from the 5th to the 21st centuries. Through discussions, lectures, projects and essays, students will learn to (1) analyse and interpret a literary text as well as to form and justify a critical judgment about the text. using appropriate criteria; (2) interpret literary texts; and (3) present their critical and interpretive views clearly in an MLA-format critical essay. 4 hrs. per week.
Literature medieval Books. The Online medieval and classical Library. specific authors Baragona'sChaucer Home Page Fantastic information here on Chaucer and his works. http://www.fidnet.com/~weid/literature.htm
Online Literature Resources organized by subject area (classical, medieval,Renaissance, etc medieval ArthurianLegends (Curt Bobbitt, University of specific topics and authors important to http://homepage.ntlworld.com/vicky.wiseman/Library/online_lit.html
Extractions: GENERAL The University of Virginia Electronic Text Center (David Seaman, University of Virginia) A vast collection of electronic texts, mainly English, but alsosome in French, German, Japanese, and Latin as well. HUMBUL collection of texts Bibliomania - novels, poetry, biographies TheModern English Collection (AD 1500-present) This site represents just a section of the thousands ofonline texts available through the UVa Electronic Text Center. The Modern English Collection contains 1,398titles including 4,035 manuscript and book illustrations, many of which are publicly accessible. Meridian (University of Virginia) A semiannual literary journal Brown University Women Writers Project This site focuses on pre-1830 women writers. Literary Resources on the Net (JackLynch, University of Pennsylvania) A survey of the collection of literary resources (online texts,commentary, organizations) available online. The site is organized by subject area (Classical, Medieval,Renaissance, etc.) or you can search the directory for something specific. Project Gutenberg Begun in 1971,the project is an electronic collection of literary works from Cicero's Orations to the complete works ofShakespeare to Zitkala-Sa's old Indian Legends to selections from Edith Wharton.
Extractions: English Undergraduate Courses-First Year ENG 1003. Introduction to Writing. Required of all freshmen who do not meet entrance requirements for ENG 1013. Includes intensive instruction and exercise in syntax, punctuation, spelling. and vocabulary development. English 1003 does not satisfy any English requirement,and hours earned will not count toward graduation requirements. Three lecture hours, week. Credit: Three hours. ENG 1013. Composition and Literature. (ENGL 1301) Required of all freshmen. Theory and practice of written and oral exposition and explication; rhetorical principles and organization practice especially in the essay. Prerequisite ENG 1003 or its equivalent. Three lecture hours a week. Credit: Three hours. ENG 1023. Composition and Literature. (ENGL 1302) Required of all freshmen. Theory and practice of critical exposition and basic rhetorical analysis; composing informative and investigative exposition based on research. Prerequisite: ENG 1013 or its equivalent. Three lecture hours a week. Credit: Three hours.
Queens University Of Charlotte - By Subject Animals, Humanities. Arts, Law. authors, specific, medieval Studies. Business,Music. Civilization, classical, Nursing. Countries, Philosophy/Religion. Drama,Poetry. http://www.queens.edu/library/search/by_subject.asp
VoS - Voice Of The Shuttle AngloSaxon medieval Lit. . authors, Works, Projects The Online medieval and classical Library (OMACL) (Douglas De re militari (classical and medieval military studies) (Assoc. http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=2740
Barnard Library Guide To Literature Resources Literary Criticism Collection contains over 1,000 critical and biographical websitesabout authors and their classical and medieval Geoffreychaucer.org http://www.barnard.columbia.edu/library/websubj/literatureresources.htm
Extractions: see also Theater General Bartleby.com is a collection of online texts including fiction, poetry, dictionaries, the Bible and the works of Shakespeare. A Celebration of Women Writers is a collection of texts and/or information by and about women writers. Concordance.com Full text of many works of literature along with searchable word indexes The Electronic Text Center has 5,000 publicly accessible texts in history, literature, philosophy, religion, history of science, in many languages. EServer.org at the University of Washington. An excellent starting place for most Humanities-related topics. The E Server groups information into a variety of categories, including Art and Architecture, Cultural Theory, Drama, Feminism, Race, etc. The Internet Public Library Links to over 20,000 online books Literary Resources on the Net The Online Books Page at the University of Pennsylvania has links to more than 17,000 online books Online Literary Criticism Collection contains over 1,000 critical and biographical websites about authors and their works that can be browsed by author, by title, or by literary period. Some material may be restricted to subscribers of a specific service.
Islamic Mathematics Bibliography of Mathematics in medieval Islamic Civilization Texts and Commentaries (specific authors in Chronological Order) Discusses texts by medieval Islamic authors (such as *24) http://www.math.ruu.nl/people/hogend/Islamath.html
Extractions: Version 13 January 1999. This bibliography is a revised, enlarged and updated version of the bibliography on Islamic mathematics by Richard Lorch on pp. 65-86 of Joseph W. Dauben's The History of Mathematics from Antiquity to the Present: A Selective Bibliography , New York and London: Garland, 1985. This bibliography of Islamic mathematics will appear as a chapter in the updated (1999?) version of Dauben's book which will be made available as a CD-Rom. Reactions and suggestions are very welcome, and can be sent to hogend@math.uu.nl . In this preliminary form, no attention has been paid to diacritical marks in Arabic names. The items in the bibliography have been numbered *1, *2, ... *122, *122a, *122b, *123 etc. and many cross-references have been provided. General Introduction Introductory Works Bibliographies and Handbooks Illustrated Works ... Texts and Commentaries (Specific Authors in Chronological Order) Studies on Specific Subjects Transmission of Mathematics Mathematics in Specific Areas in the Islamic World Arithmetic Irrational Magnitudes ... Number Theory, Indeterminate Equations and Magic Squares
Humanities Medieval Studies Old English Poetry (Labyrinth); Online medieval and classical Library (UC Specificauthors Works. medieval authors, Works and Projects (Voice of the Shuttle). http://vax.wcsu.edu/library/h_medieval_studies.html
Extractions: General Index Sites Text Sites Bibliographies Manuscripts ... Teaching Resources Anthology of Middle English Literature (1350-1485) (Anniina Jokinen) Armarium Labyrinthi/Labyrinth Latin Bookscase (Georgetown Univ.) L'Association des Bibliophiles Universels (ABU) (literary texts in French) Brown University Women Writers Project Celt Corpus of Electronic Texts (Margaret Lantry) CETH: Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities (Rutgers Univ.)
Internet Resources as well as information on the works and their authors. literary works of classicaland medieval civilization that images and an encyclopedia of classical terms http://library.uncwil.edu/is/englishinternet.htm
J. Willard Marriott Library Research Guides the classical world and addressing specific topics as from History Ancient and MedievalSeries A biographical and critical essays on major classical authors. http://www.lib.utah.edu/ResGuides/classics.html
List Of Graduate Courses variations in texts of the classical, medieval, and early JPNS 5210 classical ProseLiterature A close study of selected prose works and authors from the http://www.colorado.edu/ealld/crs-grad.html
Extractions: The following graduate courses are offered through the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations. The listing does not constitute a guarantee or contract that any particular course will be offered during a given year. Many courses may be offered to non-majors. Students should check with the department or individual instructors for policies. Chinese Graduate Courses Japanese Graduate Courses CHIN 5010: Sinological Methods Provides training in research methods for graduate work in sinology. Weekly exercises require students to use standard bibliographic sources and tools. Students use lei-shu ts'ung-shu , dictionaries, dynastic histories, geographical treatises, gazetteers, and private historiography. Prereq., CHIN 3220 or equivalent.
Classics And Mediterranean Archaeology of MA Mansoor; Texts, authors, Contexts Graduate With headings for Greek classical,Etruscan, Hellenistic Early Christian, Byzantine, medieval and Romanesque http://rome.classics.lsa.umich.edu/welcome.html
Extractions: (Last modified September 25, 2000 The 50 most recent additions. . Updates have been few lately but I'm working on it. Feel free to resend if I've missed anything.) This document collects links to internet resources of interest to classicists and Mediterranean archaeologists. Please feel free to copy the links in this page for whatever purposes you see fit (the pages referred to come with their own restrictions). Entries followed by sfsh@umich.edu Texts, Projects, Journals, Bibliographies