Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_B - British Literature Arthurian

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 96    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  

         British Literature Arthurian:     more books (83)
  1. Dutch Romances: II. Ferguut (Arthurian Archives) by David F. Johnson, 2000-11-16
  2. An Arthurian Reader: Selections from Arthurian Legend, Scholarship and Story by John Matthews, 1991-07
  3. Arthurian Narrative in the Latin Tradition (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature) by Siân Echard, 2005-10-20
  4. Camelot in the Nineteenth Century: Arthurian Characters in the Poems of Tennyson, Arnold, Morris, and Swinburne (Contributions to the Study of World Literature) by Robert Thomas Lambdin, Laura Lambdin, 2000-07-30
  5. The Quest for the Grail: Arthurian Legend in British Art 1840-1920 by Christine Poulson, 1999-07
  6. Culture and the King: The Social Implications of the Arthurian Legend (Suny Series in Medieval Studies)
  7. Arthurian Legends: An Illustrated Anthology by Richard Barber, 1996-04-30
  8. The Arthurian Annals: The Tradition in English from 1250 to 2000 (2 Volume Set) by Daniel P. Nastali, Phillip C. Boardman, 2004-12-09
  9. The New Arthurian Encyclopedia: Updated Paperback Edition (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities)
  10. Arthurian Period Sources: Gildas: The Ruin of Britain and Other Documents (v. 7) by M. Winterbottom, 1980-12-01
  11. An Introduction to Malory (Arthurian Studies) by Terence McCarthy, 2002-11-18
  12. The British Sources of the Abduction and Grail Romances by Flint Johnson, 2002-07
  13. Arthurian Studies in Honour of P.J.C. Field
  14. Geoffrey of Monmouth as Feminist Historian, Mythmaker, and Mythographer (Studies in Arthurian and Courtly Cultures) by Fiona Tolhurst, 2011-04-26

21. Longman Compact Anthology Of British Literature - Compact Edition - Allyn & Baco
in depth and as major contributions throughout the history of british literature.Perspectives Sections Clusters of works on such topics as arthurian myth in
http://www.ablongman.com/catalog/academic/product/1,4096,0321076702,00.html?type

22. English @ TCU - People
LINDA HUGHES. Addie Levy Professor of literature. 19th Century british literature,Women’s literature, arthurian Studies. Ph.D., Missouri. SIMON JOYCE.
http://www.eng.tcu.edu/people/
English @ TCU HOME SITE MAP DISCUSSION BOARDS CONTACT INFO ... Resources
Department Faculty Full-Time Faculty BONNIE BLACKWELL Assistant Professor . 18th Century Literature. Ph.D., Cornell. CARA DIACONOFF Lecturer . Creative writing and Contemporary literature. M.A., Wisconsin. MFA, Indiana. NEIL EASTERBROOK Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies . Literary Theory, American Poetry, Rhetoric and Literature. Ph.D., SUNY—Buffalo. RICHARD LEO ENOS Lillian Radford Chair of Rhetoric and Composition. Professor . History of Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory. Ph.D., Indiana. BOB J. FRYE Professor . 18th Century British Literature, Satire, Rhetoric and Composition, Southwestern American Literature. Ph.D., Tennessee. THERESA STROUTH GAUL Assistant Professor . U.S. literature to 1900, Women's writing, Race in the early national period. Ph.D., Wisconsin-Madison. ANN GEORGE Assistant Professor . Composition and Rhetoric, Cultural History, Kenneth Burke Studies. Ph.D., Penn State.

23. English @ TCU - People
LINDA HUGHES. Addie Levy Professor of literature. 19th Century british literature,Women’s literature, arthurian Studies. Ph.D., Missouri. DAVE KUHNE.
http://www.eng.tcu.edu/people/faculty.index.html
English @ TCU HOME SITE MAP DISCUSSION BOARDS CONTACT INFO ... Resources
Department Faculty BONNIE BLACKWELL Assistant Professor . 18th Century Literature. Ph.D., Cornell. CARA DIACONOFF Lecturer . Creative writing and Contemporary literature. M.A., Wisconsin. MFA, Indiana. NEIL EASTERBROOK Associate Professor . Literary Theory, American Poetry, Rhetoric and Literature. Ph.D., SUNY—Buffalo. RICHARD LEO ENOS Lillian Radford Chair of Rhetoric and Composition. Professor and Chair of the Department, 2002-2003 . History of Rhetoric, Rhetorical Theory. Ph.D., Indiana. BOB J. FRYE Professor . 18th Century British Literature, Satire, Rhetoric and Composition, Southwestern American Literature. Ph.D., Tennessee. THERESA STROUTH GAUL Assistant Professor . U.S. literature to 1900, Women's writing, Race in the early national period. Ph.D., Wisconsin-Madison. ANN GEORGE Assistant Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies . Composition and Rhetoric, Cultural History, Kenneth Burke Studies. Ph.D., Penn State.

24. Untitled Document
arthurian Legend EN151 Humanities EN175 - Popular Fiction EN212 - Ancient literatureEN215 - Medieval literature EN220 - Enlightenment british literature
http://www.plymouth.edu/catalogsearch/search.phtml?cmd=searchdept&departmentcode

25. Arthurian Links
Resources and numerous articles in the journal british Archaeology in the AnnalesCambriae online at the Camelot Project; arthurian literature - contains links
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~tomgreen/arthlinks.htm
Arthurian Homepage Arthurian Literature Arthurian Sites Myrddin ... Arthurian Characters Arthurian Links Links
  • Arthuriana - subscribe to ARTHURNET and the journal of the International Arthurian Society, Arthuriana Arthurian Resources on the Internet - a valuable guide by John J. Doherty The Camelot Project at the University of Rochester - quite simply a wonderful resource King Arthur: History and the Arthurian Legend - a great site but too dependent in places on Geoffrey Ashe Historical Arthur - an interesting site based on older scholarship, though most of this is now rejected - for example, Collingwood's methodology with regards to identifying the battles in the Historia Brittonum was described by Professor Jackson (whose 'Once Again Arthur's Battles' from the Journal of Modern Philology 43 (1945-6) pp.44-57 is required reading on this topic) thus: "For Collingwood, Arthur fought only the Jutes of Kent, and concequently the battles had to be discovered in south-eastern England. They were." ( ibid ., p.45)

26. Arthurian Literature
et al (edd.) The Arthur of the Welsh The arthurian Legend in Medieval Welsh literature(Cardiff 1991 of the Graves' in Proceedings of the british Academy 53
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~tomgreen/arthlit.htm
Arthurian Homepage Myrddin Arthurian Sites Historicity of Arthur ... Arthurian Characters Arthurian Literature This page is intended to provide a brief guide to the manuscripts and the literature within them concerning Arthur - the main focus of this guide will be on the 'Welsh' Arthur and readers wishing to know about other Arthurian literature are referred to the links listed elsewhere and the excellent Camelot Project at the University of Rochester . Parallel texts and translations of much of the early literature are readily available in John B. Coe and Simon Young The Celtic Sources for the Arthurian Legend (Llanerch 1995). The Nature of Arthur When considering the literature it is important to understand the nature of the Arthur that appears here. The Arthur of (pre-Galfridian) literature was "above all else...a defender of his country against every kind of danger, both internal and external: a slayer of giants and witches, a hunter of monstrous animals - giant boars, a savage cat monster, a winged serpent (or dragon) - and also, as it appears from Culhwch and Preiddeu Annwn , a releaser of prisoners. This concept [of Arthur] is substantiated from all the early sources: the poems

27. English@UAB : Graduate Studies: Reading List: British Literature Before 1500
in the Norton Anthology of british literature, Vol Hanawalt, Barbara, ed. Chaucer'sEngland literature in Historical Lacy, Norris J., ed. arthurian Encyclopedia
http://www.uab.edu/english/grad/lists/britpre1500.html
This site will not appear as designed information is still accessible. To see the site as designed, upgrade your browser Home Contact Us UAB ... Contact Information Concentrations Literature Rhetoric and Composition Creative Writing Exams and Reading Lists ... Application Information
Reading List: British Literature Before 1500
Print-friendly version of Reading List Return to Reading List Index
Old English Period
The following works should be available in the Norton Anthology of British Literature , Vol. 1, and in Kevin Crossley-Holland's The Anglo-Saxon World (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1984).
  • Beowulf The Wanderer The Seafarer The Wifeâs Lament The Dream of the Rood
Suggested secondary readings Fell, Christine. Women in Anglo-Saxon England . Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1984. Fulk, R. D. ed. Interpretations of Beowulf. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1992. Godden, Malcolm and Michael Lapidge, eds. The Cambridge Companion to Old English Literature . Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1991. Hill, John M. The Cultural World in Beowulf. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1995. Mitchell, Bruce and F. C. Robinson, eds.

28. Literatures In English: British Literature By Period
The Main Menu lists arthurian characters, symbols, and of the Shuttle Contemporary(british American to modern and contemporary literature divided into
http://library.concordia.ca/collections/subjpages/english4.html
Literatures in English: British Literature by Period Shakespeare
Romantic
Victorian Twentieth Century ...
Anthology of Middle English Literature
Features texts, links, essays, articles, and some audio files. "The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Sixth Edition, has been the main authority consulted for accuracy of dates and details."
Beowulf Sites
The Camelot Project at the University of Rochester
"The Camelot Project is designed to make available in electronic format a database of Arthurian texts, images, bibliographies, and basic information. The project, begun in 1995, is sponsored by the University of Rochester and prepared in The Robbins Library, a branch of Rush Rhees Library. The Main Menu lists Arthurian characters, symbols, and sites. You may move from any highlighted element to a sub-menu of basic information, texts, images, and a bibliography about that subject. You may also look at a menu arranged by author with most medieval texts listed under the heading "Anonymous." A third menu lists artists and their works."
Chaucer Metapage
"This project was initiated at the 33rd International Congress of Medieval Studies by a group of medievalists interested in promoting Chaucer studies on the WWW. Its aims are: to organize and provide navigation aides for Chaucer resources on the WWW."

29. §1. Early Welsh Tradition. XII. The Arthurian Legend. Vol. 1. From The Beginnin
names in the british islands and the amount of early british literature, whetherin English or in the insular Celtic tongues, dealing with the arthurian legend
http://www.bartleby.com/211/1201.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History From the Beginnings to the Cycles of Romance The Arthurian Legend ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
Volume I. From the Beginnings to the Cycles of Romance.

30. Lamson Library: English Connections
Interesting Sites Index American literature / arthurian Legend / Authors,American / Authors, british / Authors, Canadian / Authors, World / Bible
http://oz.plymouth.edu/~library/eng.html
Lamson Library
English Connections

31. British Literature To 1800 Syllabus
the larger historical, cultural, and theoretical contexts of the british literarytradition Week 3 Histories of England Race and Nation / arthurian literature.
http://pages.slu.edu/student/walterj/courses/350_syllabus.html
Home Teaching Research Projects ... Personal Instructor: John Walter Office: Humanities 249 Office Hours: M: 11:10 - 12:10
W: 8:40 - 9:40 Office Phone: Email: walterj@slu.edu
General Description
This course will trace the development of English and British literary and cultural traditions from the early medieval period (the Anglo-Saxon period) to the end of the 18th century (the early romantic writers). Obviously, such a course will be unable to cover everything, but we will attempt to explore several distinct cultural and historical periods, by reading selections of the literature from each. Also, we will trace several social, cultural, and literary movements as they develop over time. We will also read texts contemporary with the literature of each period but not usually considered "literary" in the traditional sense. These will provide the cultural context in which the literary works emerged and will allow us to consider the dialogue between literary work and other forms of cultural discourse and representation. While this course may be used to fulfill the second of two core requirements in literature, it is also recommended for English majors. Therefore, it may demand a level of work that is somewhat more intensive than that required in other 300-level literature classes. This course is designed to introduce beginning and potential English majors to the historical, the cultural, and even the theoretical ground from which they will pursue their further studies.

32. Faculty
Medieval literature, Old English arthurian and Romance literature, Fantasy, Science Seventeenthand Eighteenth Century british literature, Modern british
http://www.slu.edu/colleges/AS/ENG/faculty/faclist.html

English Home
Courses Faculty Graduate ... Publications
Department of English Faculty
Sara van den Berg, Ph.D. (Yale University) Academic Department Chairperson and Professor. Ben Jonson, Milton, Seventeenth Century Literature, Psychoanalytic Theory, Medicine and the Humanities Paul Acker, Ph.D. (Brown University) Associate Professor. Old and Middle English Literature, Old Norse Literature, Critical Theory, Creative Writing, Poetry, Film Fred Arroyo, Ph.D. (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee) Assistant Professor. Rhetorical Theory, Cultural Studies, Literacy, Ethnic Literacy Narratives, Creative Writing (Fiction) Toby R. Benis, Ph.D. (Columbia University) Assistant Professor. British Romanticism, Women Writers of the British Romantic Period, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century British Literature Raymond Benoit, Ph.D. (University of Oregon) Dorothy McBride Orthwein Professor. Romanticism, American Literature, Myth and Literature Harold K. Bush, Jr., Ph.D.

33. Thesis
literature; arthurian literature; Classical Mythology; Gender; Ovid; AngloSaxonLanguage and literature. Phillip Marcus. Twentieth Century british literature;
http://www.fiu.edu/~englma/faculty.htm
Department of English Master of Arts Admissions MA Handbook Courses Faculty ... GSA
Faculty
F or information about contacting individual faculty, please go to the Directory on the Home Page. The information provided below is to assist you in selecting faculty to serve on your thesis committee. It includes general information such as the professor’s period specialty and more specific information such as teaching and research interests. Please be aware that professors may have expertise in certain literature(s) and aspects of literary and cultural studies while possessing an interest in, but not necessarily claiming expertise, in other areas. Do not hesitate to consult with professors no matter how remote their interests may seem to your project. A professor can guide you to a colleague whose interests and expertise fit more closely with your thesis. Consider, also, that placing a professor on your committee who offers a different perspective or a contrasting point of view can serve to strengthen and enrich your argument. And, finally, professors often have interests that must be set aside in order to focus on primary research goals or to meet other demands. Your thesis project may offer an opportunity for him/her to revive a "dormant" interest.
Note: BBC = Biscayne Bay Campus
Tucker Arnold Modern Southern American Literature;

34. ENGLISH 205: BRITISH LITERATURE I
English 205 british literature I 6Introduction to Medieval literatureRead Introductionto Vol 13 arthurian Legend (1) Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Parts
http://www.english.udel.edu/lpotter/english205syllabus.html
English 205: British Literature I Lois Potter Office hours: 307 Memorial MWF 11-12 or by appointment lpotter@udel.edu Course Description This course will be confined to the medieval and Renaissance periods (vols. 1A and 1B of the Norton), ending with Paradise Lost , which was published after the Restoration but generally considered a Renaissance text (hence it appears in IB of the Norton rather than IC). A great deal of the work will take place in class, including much of the writing; the main out-of-class activity, apart from reading, will be memorization. You will also have to take part in one performance of a short scene from a play. See notes at the end for explanation of the various assignments. Texts Vols. IA and IB of the Norton Anthology of English Literature You should always bring the relevant volume to class. A few other short texts will be given out as needed. Be sure to read the introductory notes on each of the required readings. SCHEDULE The class will meet in 111 Memorial on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 10.10 to 11 am. September Course introduction Introduction to Medieval Literature: Read Introduction to Vol. IA (pp. 1-6), “The Story of Caedmon,” “The Dream of the Rood,” “The Wife’s Lament” (pp. 102-3), and

35. Tar
Chaucer. british literature I. british literature II british Romantic literature.Romanticism. arthurian literature. World literature I. Sophomore World literature.
http://www.uta.edu/english/TAR/tar.html
Two Poems
Animated Sin Animated Sin (Amiga IFF version) Plain Sin
Allegory ... UTA

36. Literary Periods
Drama Homepage; Romantic british literature; Romanticism On the Net;Saxon Shore; Short History of arthurian Archaeology; Society for
http://pilgrims.net/plymouth/schools/Links/Academic_Education/Language_Arts/Lite

37. Sources For The Study Of The Arthurian Legends
The Return of King Arthur british and American arthurian literature Since1800 title page erroneously reads 1900 . Cambridge DS Brewer, 1983.
http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/acpbibs/genbib.htm
AN ARTHURIANA / CAMELOT PROJECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Sources for the Study of the Arthurian Legends
by
Alan Lupack
GENERAL SOURCES:
The New Arthurian Encyclopedia . Ed. Norris Lacy et al. New York: Garland, 1991.
Lacy, Norris J. and Geoffrey Ashe. The Arthurian Handbook . New York: Garland, 1988.
Medieval Arthurian Literature: A Guide to Recent Research . Ed. Norris J. Lacy. New York: Garland Publishing, 1996.
Guerreau-Jalabert, Anita.
Ruck, E. H. An Index of Themes and Motifs in Twelfth-Century French Arthurian Poetry . Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1991.
JOURNALS:
Arthurian Literature . (An annual publication from Boydell and Brewer.)
Arthurian Yearbook . (Annual from Garland from 1991 to 1993, now discontinued.)
Avalon to Camelot . (Vols. 1-2 are all that were printed.)
Arthuriana
(NOTE: An earlier Arthurian newsletter Quondam et Futurus was combined with the journal Arthurian Interpretations to become Quondam et Futurus: A Journal of Arthurian Interpretations Arthuriana has replaced these earlier publications and is now the official journal of the North American Branch of the International Arthurian Society.)

38. British Literature Author
Robert Burns british author biography Caligula) The Age of Cavalryand arthurian literature John of Guildford (fl. 1225) Richard
http://www.schems.org/odor-control.htm

39. The Age Of Cavalry And Arthurian Literature
Gradually, the british found it increasingly difficult to hold out against the Consequently,it is not coincidental that the arthurian literature that we are
http://www.georgetown.edu/users/kammerb/cavalry.htm
The Age of Cavalry and Arthurian Literature
Warfare during the fifth and sixth centuries, the most likely time of the historical King Arthur, was primitive and brutal. Evidence for such a harsh form of warfare can be found in the medieval texts of Gildas Nennius knight as a soldier who was relatively well equipped in regard to weapons and armor and was trained to fight on horseback, forming a military class distinction denoting professional elite troops (10). These knights dominated the social and political aspects of life, and more importantly for our discussion, warfare. Chretien de Troyes , in his late twelfth century work " The Knight of the Cart, " provides a clear picture of the knight, illustrating the importance of knights not only on the battlefield, but also in Arthurian literature: "When he was armed, he remounted at once and took up the shield and the long, straight, and colorfully painted lance; at his side he hung the sharp, bright sword." The passage above by Chretien does two things. Written probably in 1160-80, the passage first introduces the knight into Arthurian literature, and secondly, gives us a glimpse at the business end of a knight, namely his weapons. The two principle weapons of the knight, as shown by the passage, are the lance and the sword. The lance was usually made of ash wood, about fourteen feet in length, and carried vertically until lowered for the charge, where it could be wielded overarm or thrown. It depended on the combined momentum of the horse and the knight to achieve its desired effect. However, lances were easily broken, and after the initial impact, were practically useless (Prestwich 26). Lances are best remembered for jousting, and Chretien contains several examples of their use, as does

40. BRITISH LITERATURE RESOURCES
ANIMAL FARM GEORGE ORWELL RESOURCES. arthurian RESOURCES. BOOKS AND WRITERS. ABRIEF OUTLINE OF MEDIEVAL ENGLISH literature. british EMPIRE POETRY RESOURCES.
http://www.chlive.org/home/eastlibrary/BRITISHLITRESOURCES.htm
BRITISH LITERATURE RESOURCES
created by Peggy Beck See also ONLINE RESOURCES. Select GALENET, Literature Resource Center to begin searching. See World's Best Poetry Online (Click on Start Searching.) See also Poets and Poetry.
ANIMAL FARM
ARTHURIAN RESOURCES
BECKETT, SAMUEL (See SAMUEL BECKETT RESOURCES.
BEOWULF RESOURCES BLAKE, WILLIAM (See BOOKS AND WRITERS A BRIEF OUTLINE OF MEDIEVAL ENGLISH LITERATURE
BRITISH EMPIRE POETRY RESOURCES
BRITISH EMPIRE RESOURCES BRITISH HISTORY RESOURCES
THE BRITISH LIBRARY
BYRON, LORD (GEORGE GORDON) (See THE CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE ONLINE
CHARLES DICKENS RESOURCES
CHAUCER RESOURCES (See GEOFFREY CHAUCER RESOURCES.
CLASSICAL AUTHORS INDEX
CLASSICS AT THE ONLINE LITERATURE LIBRARY (James Barrie, Anne Bronte, Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte, Lewis Carroll, Charles Dickens, Arthur Conan Doyle, John Milton, Mary Shelley, Bram Stoker, H.G. Wells)
COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR (See
C. S. LEWIS
DRAMA RESOURCES
EARLY MODERN LITERARY STUDIES (RENAISSANCE, DONNE, MILTON)
EDMUND SPENSER RESOURCES
ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND RESOURCES ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE RESOURCES (INDIANA UNIVERSITY BLOOMINGTON LIBRARIES) ESERVER
GEOFFREY CHAUCER RESOURCES
GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON (See

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 2     21-40 of 96    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter