The following sites provide excellent resources for anyone interested
in the study of literature
and composition:
Online Literature
UPenn Books Online - over 11,000 literary texts,
http://digital.library.upenn.edu/books.
"Passions in Poetry" - this site offers hundreds of poems and the
section (categorized by
authors) of classical poetry is especially good (it includes major
British and American poetry
from the early 14th to late 19th centuries), http://www.netpoets.com.
Bartleby.com - a nicely organized selection of online literature,
encyclopedias, and
collections of quotations, http://www.bartleby.com.
The Internet Public Library - a comprehensive selection of books,
newspaper, literary
criticism, reference materials, children's and adolescent literature
collected by the University
of Michigan. The site currently contains nearly 30,000 texts and/or references,
http://www.ipl.org/col.
Calls for Papers
If you'd like to get published, attend a conference, or present a
paper at a scholarly conference, these
two sites offer the most comprehensive lists of paper calls:
The English Server - http://english-www.hss.cmu.edu/calls
The UPenn Server - http://www.english.upenn.edu/CFP
Literary Criticism and Theory
"The Voice of the Shuttle" Web Page for Humanities Research. This site
offers perhaps the
most comprehensive collection of links to specific authors, genres,
theories, syllabi,
academic information, technology, etc., available on the web. The site
is an ongoing
project headed by Alan Liu of the University of Southern California -
Santa Barbara:
http://vos.ucsb.edu
Jack Lynch's Collection - Rutgers University. Though not as
comprehensive as the Voice of
the Shuttle page listed above, Jack Lynch's site is also a goldmine of
links to sites on theory,
literary periods, authors, genres, and so forth:
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/theory.html
Yahoo's Links to Criticism and Theory. Another excellent resource for
finding materials on
literary theory and criticism:
http://dir.yahoo.com/Arts/Humanities/Literature/Criticism_and_Theory
Introduction to Literary Theory. Website of Kristi Siegel, a faculty
member of the Mount
Mary College English Department, offering descriptions, bibliographies
and key figures of
major twentieth-century critical theories.
http://www.geocities.com/kristisiegel/theory.htm
On-Book – website of Jane Thompson, a faculty member of the Mount Mary College
English Department, providing her own information as well as many
links to other literature
and theory resources: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/1653
Composition and Writing Resources
A Guide to Writing College English Papers - from the English
Department at the University
of Puget Sound - nice clear information and reasonable expectations:
http://www.ups.edu/faculty/dewhite/papers.htm
Writing Tips and Strategies – Collection of mini-lectures by Kristi
Siegel, Mount Mary
College faculty member, on various writing techniques such as
description, pacing,
developing a thesis statement, using the writing process, eliminating
clichés, varying
sentence style and patterns, http://www.geocities.com/kristisiegel
Writing Better - A Guide for Amherst Students - a nice, clear
introduction to writing:
http://www.amherst.edu/~writing/wb_html/wb.html
The Elements of Style - William Strunk, Jr.'s classic 1918 text on
writing and style. Timeless
advice. The book is divided into sections for easy accessibility:
http://www.bartleby.com/141/
Grammar Resources
This truly superb collection of interactive grammar quizzes (they're
actually fun), vocabulary
quizzes, and other writing resources provides an excellent resource
for those needing
grammar brush-ups. The site was developed by Dr. Charles Darling from
the Capital
Community College. He also includes pages of grammar "bloopers" and other lively
references: http://webster.commnet.edu/HP/pages/darling/original.htm
Jack Lynch's Guide to Grammar and Style: An alphabetical listing and
description of
common grammatical glitches. He also has some good bibliographic references:
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Writing
Technology and Literature/Composition
How to Use the Internet for Literary Study - An informative guide
written by Professor Greg
Jay at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; besides his own
information he also provides
many useful links: http://www.uwm.edu/~gjay/Litcrit/Weblitguide.htm
Writing and Technology - .pdf files providing visual step-by-step
instructions for using
computer-assisted techniques to augment the writing process. Materials
developed by Gene
Baer, Kristi Siegel, and Martin Moldenhauer,
http://www.geocities.com/kristisiegel
Professional Organizations and Academia
English Departments on the Web -Want to see what other English
Departments are doing?
This comprehensive list links to over 1,300 English Departments on the web:
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/english/links/engdpts.html
Modern Language Association (MLA): http://www.mla.org
National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE): http://www.ncte.ie
Sigma Tau Delta - English Honors Society: http://www.english.org
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