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         British Literature Arthurian:     more books (66)
  1. The Arthurian Name Dictionary (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities) by C. Bruce, 1998-12-01
  2. The British Sources of the Abduction and Grail Romances by Flint Johnson, 2002-07
  3. Arthurian Bibliography III: 1978-1992 Author Listing and Subject Index (Arthurian Studies)
  4. Malory's 'Morte D'Arthur': Remaking Arthurian Tradition by Catherine Batt, 2002-05-03
  5. A Companion to Wolfram's Parzival (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture)
  6. Arthurian Studies in Honour of P.J.C. Field (Arthurian Studies)
  7. The Earliest Arthurian Texts: Greek and Latin Sources of the Medieval Tradition by Graham Anderson, 2007-05-04
  8. The Genesis of Narrative in Malory's Morte Darthur (Arthurian Studies) by Elizabeth Edwards, 2000-11-30
  9. Malory's Book of Arms: The Narrative of Combat in Le Morte Darthur (Arthurian Studies) by Andrew Lynch, 1997-04-17
  10. The Social and Literary Contexts of Malory's Morte Darthur (Arthurian Studies)
  11. Bastardy As a Gifted Status in Chaucer and Malory (Studies in Mediaeval Literature) by Jessica Lewis Watson, 1996-06
  12. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: Sources and Analogues (Arthurian Studies)
  13. Arthurian Localities by John S. Stuart Glennie, 2003-08
  14. Arthurian Period Sources: Gildas: The Ruin of Britain and Other Documents (Arthurian Period Sources) by M. Winterbottom, 1980-12-01

41. 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."

42. §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, whether in 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 Cultural Literacy 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 Respectfully Quoted 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.

43. Longman Compact Anthology Of British Literature
Anthology of british literature Compact Edition Longman Compact Anthology of british literature - Compact Edition Norton completely ignores arthurian lit
http://law-books.org/Longman_Compact_Anthology_of_British_Literature.html

Home
Search High Volume Orders Links ... Technology Law Additional Subjects Why Beauty Matters Crime Science Dunlap-Hanna Pennsylvania Forms Brodie's Notes on Gerald Cole's "Gregory's Girl" ... United States State Local General Widow Featured Books Longman Compact Anthology of British Literature - Compact Edition
I appreciate the breadth and balance of the selection of materials in the Longman Anthology, particularly in comparison with the Norton Anthology. While the Norton Anthology has more prestige, it has some curious choices of material (granted I own the 7th edition some improvements may have been made in newer issues). Where the Longman anthology (in a one-volume anthology no less) has a verse translation of Beowulf, Norton has a turgid prose translation. Norton completely ignores Arthurian lit...
Written by David Damrosch Christopher Baswell Clare Carroll Kevin Dettmar ... Stuart Sherman
Published by Pearson Longman (December 1999)
ISBN 0321076702
Price $74.00

44. PROSEMINAR IN EARLY ENGLISH LITERATURE
Medieval literature, or more general surveys of early british literature. Hanawalt, ed. Chaucer’s England literature in Historical Apr 1 arthurian material.
http://web.utk.edu/~rliuzza/proseminar/proseminar.html
R. M. Liuzza
Office: 112 NM (10-12 TW) Phone: 862-8157 English 706-01
Proseminar in Early British Literature
Spring 2002 COURSE POLICIES 1. Jan 14 Introduction and Organization Task no. 1 (due via email by Jan 22): find and compare online syllabi for surveys of Medieval literature, or more general surveys of early British literature. what is common? what is rare? what schedule is kept? Consider as well the content, organization and apparatus of the major anthologies for this subject (Norton, Longman, etc.). What constitutes the canon of early English literature? How is it divided? What is excluded? Prepare a summary of your findings for the class, indicating your choices for best organized or most useful resources, as well as a warning about particularly useless or disorganized ones. Also, begin reading about Old English and the Anglo-Saxons: everyone should read Campbell et al The Anglo-Saxons here ; you should also read at least one of the following critical overviews of OE literature: Godden and Lapidge, eds., Cambridge Companion to Old English Literature Reading Old English Texts ; Frantzen

45. Sources For The Study Of The Arthurian Legends
The Return of King Arthur british and American arthurian literature Since 1800 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.)

46. Glencoe British Literature: Unit 1 - Reading On Your Own
and Camelot for an indepth exploration of the influence arthurian legend had Irish dramatist George Bernard Shaw won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1925.
http://www.glencoe.com/sec/literature/course/brlit/unit1/readonown.shtml

Theme 1
Theme 2
Theme 3

Theme 4
...
Theme 12

A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain Mark Twain at Large: His Travels Here and Abroad
Mark Twain traveled extensively throughout his life. This Web exhibit from the University of California at Berkeley's Bancroft Library displays original manuscripts, letters, and photos from Twain's travels, culled from the library's famous collection of Mark Twain papers.
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court

Find out how the legends and authors of the Middle Ages inspired Mark Twain to write one of the very first time travel novels, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Be sure to click on MT, His Time , and Camelot for an in-depth exploration of the influence Arthurian legend had on Twain. Down the Common by Ann Baer The City of Women
This comprehensive site examines the vital role women played in Medieval society, covering subjects such as family life, military participation, and marriage customs.

47. Glencoe British Literature Unit 1: Theme 1 - "Sir Gawain And The Green Knight"
literature Home, Dictionary, Thesaurus, Search, Site Map. Anonymous. A Quest for Arthur This article by scholar Geoffrey Ashe explores the origins of the arthurian
http://www.glencoe.com/sec/literature/course/brlit/unit1/theme1/webresources/kni

Theme 1
Theme 2
Theme 3

Theme 4
...
Theme 12

Anonymous A Quest for Arthur
This article by scholar Geoffrey Ashe explores the origins of the Arthurian legend and attempts to distinguish historical fact from literary imaginings. Use your imagination to expand upon the knowledge you have picked up over the years about King Arthur, Camelot, or any of the knights of the Round Table and write your own tale to add to the legend! Biography of Sir Gawain
Read the brief biography of Gawain Gwalltafwyn, King of Gododdin included on this site. How does the story of "the loathly lady" illustrate the concepts of chivalry and a knight's duty to protect his king? What does the story add to your impression of Gawain's character? Record your responses in the Web Links Activity Log

48. Basic Reading List
britishAmerican Books. Welsh Triads, Gododdin, other references The Arthur of the Welsh The arthurian Legend in Medieval Welsh literature, by Rachel Bromwich
http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/jshoaf/Arthurbook.htm
A Reading List:
Recommended cheap (sort of), available (probably) translations of medieval Arthurian texts For another, very similar list with links to an online bookstore, check out Linda Malcor's Dragonlords' BookstoreArthur. Another good starting place is the Camelot Project Bibliography Sources for the Study of the Arthurian Legends. Anthologies and reference Cyclical works (13th-15th c.) Pre-12th century texts ... Buying books online
Anthologies and Reference: Richard Barber, Arthurian Legends: An Illustrated Anthology
Brengle, Arthur, King of Britain (Prentice-Hall or Appleton-Century-Crofts)
James Wilhelm, The Romance of Arthur : An Anthology of Medieval Texts in Translation (Garland) Norris J. Lacy, ed. New Arthurian Encyclopedia , or the older Arthurian Encyclopedia (Garland)
Norris J. Lacy and Geoffrey Ashe, Arthurian Handbook (Garland 1988, revised 1997) Before the beginning: some Latin histories seem to refer to an Arthur or Arthur-like leader who was a general or leader of the Britons around the year 500; Welsh poems and stories refer to or tell of a legendary Arthur.
Gildas De Excidio Britanniae (On the Ruin of Britain)
, (6th c.) pub. British-American Books; or

49. MEMS Faculty
Professor English pcraddoc@english.ufl.edu 17thcentury british literature and culture ufl.edu Co-Director, MEMS; Medieval German literature; arthurian studies.
http://www.clas.ufl.edu/mems/faculty.shtml
MEMS FACULTY Shifra Armon
Assistant Professor
sarmon@rll.ufl.edu

Early modern Spanish literatures and culture studies. Richard Burt
Professor
English
rburt@english.ufl.edu

Shakespeare; modern film and mass media. Avery Cahill
Lecturer
Classics
avcah@ufl.edu
Medieval Latin, Norwegian Science Fiction, Old Norse. William C. Calin Graduate Research Professor of French wcalin@rll.ufl.edu Nina Caputo Assistant Professor History ncaputo@ufl.edu Medieval Jewish History, Medieval History. Cynthia Chennault Associate Professor cchenna@aall.ufl.edu Editor, Early Medieval China . Medieval Chinese poetry and culture. Ira Clark Professor English irac@english.ufl.edu Patricia Craddock Professor English pcraddoc@english.ufl.edu 17th-century British literature and culture; children's literature. Florin Curta Associate Professor, Medieval History and Archaeology History fcurta@history.ufl.edu History of medieval Roumania, Byzantium, the Balkans, and the early Slavs; medieval archaeology. George T. Diller Professor diller@rll.ufl.edu Medieval French literature; Froissart. Frank DiTrolio Associate Libraria George A. Smathers Libraries

50. Reforming Empire: Protestant Colonialism And Conscience In British Literature
the Protestant imagination gave the british Empire its Who Would Be King, English literature about empire and Spenser reformed the arthurian chronicles and
http://www.umsystem.edu/upress/fall2002/hodgkins.htm
Reforming Empire
Protestant Colonialism and Conscience in British Literature
Christopher Hodgkins
"This is a superb bookbeautifully crafted, elegantly written, theoretically informed, and immensely learned. Hodgkins has produced an admirably well-balanced, temperate, and persuasive reinterpretation of English colonial literature, which will have a lasting impact on postcolonial critical studies."J. Martin Evans "The strength of Empire," wrote Ben Jonson, "is in religion." In Reforming Empire, Christopher Hodgkins takes Jonson's dictum as his point of departure, showing how for more than four centuries the Protestant imagination gave the British Empire its main paradigms for dominion and also, ironically, its chief languages of anti-imperial dissent. From Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene to Rudyard Kipling's "The Man Who Would Be King," English literature about empire has turned with strange constancy to themes of worship and idolatry, atrocity and deliverance, slavery and service, conversion, prophecy, apostasy, and doom. Focusing on the work of the Protestant imagination from the Renaissance origins of English overseas colonization through the modern end of England's colonial enterprise, Hodgkins organizes his study around three kinds of religious bindingunification, subjugation, and self-restraint. He shows how early modern Protestants like Hakluyt and Spenser reformed the Arthurian chronicles and claimed to inherit Rome's empire from the Caesars: how Ralegh and later Cromwell imagined a counterconquest of Spanish America, and how Milton's Satan came to resemble Cort‚s; how Drake and the fictional Crusoe established their status as worthy colonial masters by refusing to be worshiped as gods; and how seventeenth-century preachers, poets, and colonists moved haltingly toward a racist metaphysicsas Virginia began by celebrating the mixed marriage of Pocahontas but soon imposed the draconian separation of the Color Line.

51. BRITISH LITERATURE I - Weekly Assignments
words, what do the cosmos, the social order, music, art, literature, and the before writing the response so that you can include the arthurian knights tales
http://iws.ccccd.edu/andrade/britlit/chaucer/assignc.html
Week 3 Sept. 11 Medieval period objectives Primary learning objective: To show how the medieval (Middle Ages) period affects the West in the twentieth century. Individual learning objectives. In the mid-term exam students will answer some of these questions. 1 Understand the difference between the Ptolemaic (earth-centered) vision of the universe and the Copernican (heliocentric) and how the difference between the two affects humankind's faith in God. What is the state of Christian faith today? 2 Understand the hierarchical vision of life; cosmic, social (feudal), individual (the relationship of the soul and the body). To what extent does this ancient concept affect us today? Do we believe in the separation of soul and body? 3 Understand St. Augustine's influence on literature. Does his influence persist in the twentieth century? 4 Understand courtly love. To what extent has courtly love shaped our expectations of love? Assignment On Chaucer's site, view in the following order cosmos, the social order, art, cathedrals, and music (on the CD). Write a response paper on the connections; in other words, what do the cosmos, the social order, music, art, literature, and the cathedrals have in common with each other? Due before we have finished studying the medieval period. You may want to read Malory and " Sir Gawain" before writing the response so that you can include the Arthurian knights' tales instead of Chaucer's tales.

52. British Literature Online
british literature Online. hero and the exemplar of courtesy and chivalry, as he is in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and the other arthurian romances of the
http://powayusd.sdcoe.k12.ca.us/online/Britlit/pages/October_7.htm
British Literature Online Home 1st 6 weeks 1st Semester 2nd 6 weeks 1st Semester 3rd 6 weeks 1st Semester Email About Learning Point 1st 6 weeks 2nd Semester 2nd 6 weeks 2nd Semester 3rd 6 weeks 2nd Semester Links Search Engines Online Policies Sir Gawain cowering The Green Knight awaits for Sir Gawain. He will see him in a year and a day. Monday October 6th - Friday October 10th Due THIS lab day: Completed reading/ studying of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales A TYPED page statement explaining characters Chaucer likes/ dislikes is also due. Please bring your book with you. In-Class: Test on Canterbury Tales. We will read and take notes on the Nun's Priest's' Tale. If time permits, we'll begin Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Assignments: Complete Chaucer's Pardoner's Tale and The Nun's Priest's Tale . Be prepared for a test on these by next lab day. TYPE up a page that explains what Chaucer is truly saying about human nature in "The Nun's Priest's Tale". Use quotes as examples and describe why this mock epic poem exemplifies people to this day. Bring this assignment with you NEXT lab day.

53. Thesis
literature; arthurian literature; Classical Mythology; Gender; Ovid; AngloSaxon Language 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;

54. Faculty
Courses Composition, british literature I, arthurian literature, Chaucer, The English Language. (2004 New Teacher of the Year).
http://www.albion.edu/english/staff.asp
Faculty and Staff
Andrew Bethune (B.A., M.A., University of Ottawa; Ph.D., University of Toronto)
Has presented papers on Anglo-Norman and Middle English romance, political poetry in the Middle Ages, editing and manuscript studies at conferences in North America and Great Britain. Currently completing his doctoral dissertation on chivalric literature and national identity at the University of Toronto.
Courses : Composition, British Literature I, Arthurian Literature, Chaucer, The English Language. (2004 New Teacher of the Year).
E-mail ABethune@albion.edu
Mary Collar (B.A., Wisconsin; M.A. and Ph.D., Penn State) Has published on critical theory and I.B. Singer, and continues to work on
contemporary literature and theory; has received grants for research at Yale, Northwestern, Stanford, and Illinois.
Courses : Contemporary Literature, Twentieth- Century British Literature, Modern Poetry, Literary Theory, Writing Essentials, Composition, Advanced Exposition, Creative Writing. (1983- 84 Teacher of the Year)
Email mcollar@albion.edu

55. Tentative--Reading Copy
521 Contemporary british Fiction, 503 arthurian Romance. 531 California literature, 546 American Jewish Women Writers, 520 20th Century british literature.
http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~jwitek/CRSCLASS.htm
General Listing of Literature Courses by Classification F or MA Literature students : This list is not inclusive of all courses offered under each category. Not all courses are offered each semester, but this is a listing of regularly offered classes; course content and units (3-5) may vary by semester and instructor. Please see schedule for current offerings, and please remember to see your advisor for general approval of your coursework. Genre Period 501 Arthurian Romance 501 Age of Chaucer 521 Contemporary British Fiction 503 Arthurian Romance 525 Modern American Mystics 504 Elizabethan Age 525 American Poets/Painters, 1930's-60's 509 Age of Humanism 525 American Women Modernist Poets 510 Age of Wit 525 History and Literature of Baseball 514 Age of Romantics 531 California Literature 516 Age of Victorians 546 American Jewish Women Writers 520 20th Century British Literature 550 The Rise of the Novel 521 Contemporary British Fiction 551 19th Century English Novel 525 Modern American Mystics 552 Modern British Novel 526 Age of American Renaissance 553 Classic American Novel 527 American Literature 1860-1914 554 Modern American Novel 528 American Literature 1914-1960 555 The Short Story 529 American Literature 1960-Present 556 Modern American Poetry 533 Literature and the Holocaust 557 Modern British Poetry 551 19th Century English Novel 559 Mid/Late 20th Century U.S. Poetry

56. Informal Bibliography Of Arthurian Literature And Art
The Return of King Arthur british and American arthurian literature Since 1900. Cambridge Cambrideshire DS Brewer; Totowa, NJ Barnes Noble, 1983.
http://www.vmi.edu/english/arth-bib.html
A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ARTHURIAN LEGEND
IN LITERATURE AND THE ARTS Last Updated: April 24, 2003 Click here to return to Baragona's Arthurian Legend Home Page Menu Arthurian Legend: Bibliographies and Reference Books Selected Editions/Translations of Medieval Arthurian Texts Studies of Arthurian Legend in Medieval Literature and History Studies of Arthurian Legend in Modern Literature and Culture ... Studies of Arthurian Legend in Art, Film, and Music Arthurian Legend: Bibliographies and Reference Books Bibliographical Bulletin of the International Arthurian Society . 1949-present (annual). Bruce, Christopher W. The Arthurian Name Dictionary . New York: Garland, 1998. Jeffrey, David Lyle, ed. A Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1992. Lacy, Norris J., ed. Medieval Arthurian Literature: A Guide to Recent Research . New York: Garland, 1996. Lacy, Norris J., Geoffrey Ashe, et al. , eds. The Arthurian Handbook. 2nd edition. New York: Garland, 1997. [contains an extensive bibliography, to which this bibliography is indebted] Lacy, Norris J., Geoffrey Ashe

57. British Literature
Connection. british literature. AngloSaxon Culture. Avalon arthurian Heaven. Zapme british Author Links. Zapme british literature Links. See
http://hs.houstonisd.org/BellaireHS/library/british_literature.htm
Bellaire High School Library Curriculum Connection
British Literature

58. Publications & Conferences
Anonymous versus arthurian Settings in the Breton Lays’ (International Courtly literature Society, Annual british Branch Conference, University of Bristol
http://www.amandahopkins.dsl.pipex.com/research.htm
Amanda Hopkins Main Research Interests Breton Lays The Breton lay in Old French, Middle English and Old Norse: genre, origins and development, sources and analogues, authorship; relationship to other short narratives and framed and unframed narrative collections; characteristic themes and stock elements; memory and the role of commemoration; the role of minor characters; generic self-consciousness Sexuality and the Erotic Depictions of sexual activity; sexuality and gender; appropriation of neutral texts by misogynous authors; treatments of gender and sexuality in romance texts: narrative depictions of marital and extramarital sexual activity, masturbation and sexual fantasy, violation and violence Publications Articles Veiling the Text: the True Role of the Cloth in Emaré ’, in Medieval Insular Romance: Translation and Innovation , ed. Judith Weiss, Jennifer Fellows, Morgan Dickson. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer (2000), pp. 71-82 ‘Female Vulnerability as Catalyst in the Middle English Breton Lays’, in The Matter of Identity in Medieval Romance , ed. Phillipa Hardman. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer (2002), pp. 43-58

59. Faculty Search
NineteenthCentury british literature, arthurian literature, Twentieth-Century british novel, grammar, composition. Professional Highlights
http://www.su.edu/datasources/faculty_search.asp?uid=jjacob2

60. Faculty
british literature; Freshman writing; Editor, Studies in Short Fiction; trustee James Joyce Foundation. Medieval literature; arthurian legend; freshman writing
http://www.drexel.edu/catalog/FACULTY/engl.htm
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English and Philosophy Faculty
Peter Amato, Ph.D. (Fordham University) Auxiliary Instructor. Ethics; social and political philosophy; philosophy in literature.
Valarie Meliotes Arms, Ph.D. (Temple University) Professor of English and Associate Director of the Freshman Writing Program . Engineering education.
Kenneth Bingham, Ph.D. (Temple University) Auxiliary Instructor. Freshman writing; engineering ethics.
Raymond Brebach, Ph.D. (University of Illinois) Associate Professor of English. Modern British fiction; the novel; textual studies.
Jacques N. Catudal, Ph.D. (Temple University) Associate Professor of Philosophy and Vice Provost for Academic Affairs. Epistemology, philosophy of science, computer ethics. Paula Marantz Cohen, Ph.D. (Columbia University) Distinguished Professor of English . Nineteenth- and early twentieth-century English and American literature; film studies. Elaine F. DeLancey, Ph.D. (

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