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Links to Web and Local ResourcesDictionaries, Libraries, and Organizations
Link Collections and Gateways
- Voice of the Shuttle (UCSB)--a massive collection of research-oriented resources.
- The Humbul Humanities Hub--a huge collection of annotated links to on-line humanities resources.
- English Department Home Pages--more than 1300 from the US, Canada, and around the world.
- The English Server (Carnegie Mellon Univ.)--mostly scholarly, especially strong on current topics.
- Jeff Frost's English Literature Links--writers resources, e-texts, research, single authors, etc.--informal style.
- Jack Lynch's Literary Resources on the Net--a very extensive and excellent resource.
- Humanities and Social Sciences Bookmarks (Toronto)--a very extensive collection of links.
- Links to places literary (University of Dundee)--a very attractive and extensive collection of links.
- English Network Resources (Rhodes College)--an extensive and eclectic collection of links for literature, film, linguistics, e-journals, and writing.
- Bookwire--information on books, publishers, libraries, authors.
- Versification--a refereed electronic journal.
- ARL's list of electronic Journals and Newsletters.
- ARL's list of Discussion Lists.
- George Landow's Victorian Web
- The Mining Company's Author's Pages--a huge collection of links to authors' pages.
- The Electric Eclectic--an eclectic group of links for "writers and lovers of words and language."
- EDSITEment--a joint production of the NEH, the Council of the Great City Schools, WorldCom Foundation, and the National Trust for the Humanities, EDSITEment is a gateway to "high-quality material on the Internet in the subject areas of literature and language arts, foreign languages, art and culture, and history and social studies
Electronic Texts
Corpora and Searchable Collections of Literary Texts
- Time Magazine Corpus, BNC, Corpus of Contemporary American English (Mark Davies, BYU)
- Web Concordances--interactive Java concordances to works by Blake, Keats, Coleridge, and Wordsworth (R.J.C. Watt, University of Dundee).
- Concordances (full work indexes) to Classic Works on the Internet Web--large collection (William Williams)
- The Modern English Collection (searchable public domain texts at UVA).
- Searchable Shakespeare Matty Farrow (University of Sydney).
- The Bartleby Library (Columbia Univ.) (poetry, prose, drama, and some reference works.
- Poetry Index (NC State).
- Bibles at Virtual Christianity.
- Searchable Unrestricted Resources at UMich., including Bibles, The Koran, Middle English, Early Modern English, Modern English, American Verse, and more.
- An on-line Concordance to the Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake, edited by David V. Erdman (1988).
Web Links of Special Interest to Medievalists
- CRMAR: The Center for Research in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance--NYU
- The Labyrinth (Georgetown Univ.)--an important scholarly resource with many further links.
- The The Online Resource Book for Medieval Studies (ORB) (University of Kansas)--another important scholarly resource.
- The Old English Pages (Georgetown Univ.)--OE fonts, artwork, OE e-texts, discussion groups, instructional materials. etc.
- Simon Keynes Pages (OE).
- Carl T. Berkhout's Pages (OE).
- Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies (UMich).
- English 401 (UCalgary)--an Internet-based OE course.
- Old English Aerobics (UVA)--Peter Baker's on-line instructional site.
- The New Chaucer Society.
- The Chaucer Metapage.
- The Chaucer Review: An Indexed Bibliography (Baylor).
- Anniina Jokinen's ME Anthology on Luminarium.
- Medieval Resources on the Internet--Tom Goldpaugh's fine and well annotated list of Medieval resources (Marist College).
- NYU History Department's Medieval and Renaissance History page--A large collection of medieval links.
- The Online Resource Book for Medieval Studies--medieval teaching resources.
- The Celts and Saxons Homepage--an eclectic collection but with a very large number of other links.
- The Medieval Institute at Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo)--the home of the annual international medieval conference.
- The Polyglot Bible--the book of Luke in OE, ME, eMnE, and MnE (and 26 other languages).
- The Arts Multimedia Unit--high-quality images of the Exeter Book and other OE works--Bernard Muir, University of Melbourne
- Medieval Drama Links--a very full and interesting site--Sydney Higgins, Leeds
- Links to Sources for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (Steven Killings, NYU)
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