British and Irish Literature
This page:
British and Irish Literature, generally |
Authors
British and Irish Literature, generally
- British and Irish Authors on the Web - Very impressive
- Anglistik Guide - Gateway for Anglo-American language and literature
- Literatures in English - Annotated list of Websites (Library of Congress)
- Voice of the Shuttle: Literature in English
- Cambridge History of English and American Literature - 1907-1921 (Bartleby)
- Dictionary of English Literature - Full text, searchable (Bloomsbury)
- A Reading List for English Majors - Major works of English and American Literature (Rutgers)
- WWW Resources for English and American Literature (Indiana University)
- ABELL - The Annual Bibliography of English Language and Literature
Literature by Period:
- Middle English Literature, 1350-1485
- Sixteenth Century Renaissance Literature, 1485-1603
- Early Seventeenth Century Literature, 1603-1660
Luminarium (formerly Alchemyweb):
- Old English Pages (Georgetown)
- Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse (University of Michigan)
- Online Medieval and Classical Literature - Collected texts
- Contemporary Post-Colonial and Post-Imperial Literature in English
- Early Modern Literary Studies - An e-journal on 16th- and 17th-century English literature
- Metaphysical Lyrics and Poems of the Seventeenth Century (Bartleby)
- Renaissance Materials - Shakespeare's sources and other English Renaissance material (Perseus)
- Renascence Editions - "An Online Repository of Works Printed in English Between the Years 1477 and 1799"
- A Victorian Anthology, 1837-1895 (Bartleby)
- VictorianWeb: Authors
- Anthology of Irish Verse - 1922 (Bartleby)
- English Poetry (Harvard Classics via Bartleby):
- Modern British Poetry - Ed. by Louis Untermeyer, 1920 (Bartleby)
- Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250-1900 - Ed. by Quiller-Couch, 1919 (Bartleby)
- Palgrave's Golden Treasury - 1875 (Bartleby)
- Representative
Poetry - English poetry (University of Toronto)
Theatre:
- Time Out - Theatre and other London happenings
- UK Theatre (what's playing)
- What's On Stage
- Broadway.com - Tickets for Broadway and London shows
Poetry:
Authors
- Jane Austen (Henry Churchyard)
- Beowulf: A Student's Bibliography
- Beowulf: A Study Guide by Roy Liuzza
- Beowulf Translations - A guide to the many translations available, with excerpts of certain passages for comparison
- Electronic Beowulf
- International Byron Society - Includes annotated editions of Byron's works
- Lewis
Carroll home page by Joel M. Birenbaum
Chaucer:
- See my Chaucer
page
Dickens:
- Charles Dickens: An Overview - Links on all facets of Dickens (VictorianWeb)
- Dickens Page
- Discovering Dickens Project - A project of Stanford University to issue Dickens' novels in serial form, just as they were first published
- John
Donne [Luminarium]
T. S. Eliot:
- What the Thunder Said: T. S. Eliot
- TSEbase: The
Online Concordance to T. S. Eliot's Poems
Gawain Poet:
- Gawain poet (Luminarium)
- Robert Herrick (Luminarium)
- Herrick -
Poems (University of Toronto)
Johnson:
- Samuel Johnson (Jack Lynch)
- Samuel Johnson Sound Bite Page - Dr. J's opinions on many subjects [samueljohnson.com]
- Dr. Johnson's House, 17 Gough Square, London
- Samuel Johnson Birthplace Museum and Bookshop, Lichfield
- Work in Progress: A James Joyce Website (Callahan)
- IQ Infinity: The Unknown James Joyce (Barger)
- Brazen Head: A James Joyce Public House (The Modern Word)
- Dyoublong - The Irish Times' Bloomsday page
- A Gallery of Bloomsday Cards - Postcards from Dublin sites in Ulysses
- John-Keats.com
- Keats - Exhibit at the British Library
- Page at Pooh Corner
- alt.fan.pooh FAQ
- Pooh
FAQ
Orwell:
- Political Writings of George Orwell
- George Orwell - Texts, biography, pictures (orwell.ru [!])
- Pepys' Diary -
The famous 17th century diary is presented as a Weblog in real time
(What's this?) - Glossary of Colloquialisms in Rushdie
- Notes on Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses by Paul Brians
- See my Shakespeare
page
Sterne:
- Laurence Sterne in Cyberspace - I think Tristram Shandy was written for the Web. It must be an early example of hypertext.
- Virginia Woolf Web
- Woolf on the Web