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61. .: Print Version :.
Stories write us instead of us writing them any other writers of the victorian era, said Stoddard Twin Structure Disabled Women in victorian Courtship Plots
http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2004/05/02/news/inland/san_marcos/22_24_125_1_04
Editions of the North County Times Serving San Diego and Riverside Counties Contact Us Archive News Search ... Send Feedback
Last modified Saturday, May 1, 2004 10:48 PM PDT
CSUSM professor debunks disability, melodrama link
By: EVAN GRAHAM - For the North County Times SAN MARCOS Cal State San Marcos literature professor Martha Stoddard Holmes has never liked the way people repeatedly associate disability with melodrama.
"Watch any 'Movie of the Week' and you'll see what I mean," she said. People with disabilities are often described as "suffering from," or having been "afflicted with," some ailment, said Stoddard Holmes, 48.
The name of Stoddard Holmes' new book, "Fictions of Affliction: Physical Disability in Victorian Culture," released last month by the University of Michigan Press, is more than just a clever title.
Her use of the word "affliction" is somewhat ironic, she said, "and 'fiction' doesn't just refer to the novels of the era 'fictions' are also stories that we tell ourselves about what it means to be disabled.
"Stories write us instead of us writing them," she said.

62. Searchengine.net : Victorian Lifestyles
http//www.ci.annarbor.mi.us/Parks/Kempf informative site all about the victorian era and Lifestyles victorian Women s Health and Lifestyles Study The Burnet
http://www.searchengine.net/Victorian_Lifestyles.htm

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63. Homework Center - High School Literature
authors/bronte/ebronte/ebronteov.html From the victorian Web site in a way that can speak to us today. Includes display/index.cfm Search by poem, poet, or era.
http://www.multcolib.org/homework/hslit.html

School Corps
Library Catalog Library Databases Ask Us! ... Tareas Escolares
High School Literature Sites:
General High School Literature Sites
Banned Books Week

Electronic Texts

Literature by Period or Century
...
Individual Poets
General High School Literature Sites
Author Links
http://www.wessexbooks.com:80/authors.htm
Links to home pages for many authors.
Booklist
http://www.ala.org/ala/booklist/booklist.htm
The Web site of the American Library Association's Booklist provides access to reviews of books for adults, young adults, and children, written by librarians. The overall ALA Web site is searchable, and you can browse the reviews by category (Adult, Youth, Nonfiction, etc.). From January 1996 to the present; reviews appear approximately one month after their appearance in the print version of Booklist.
BookWire
http://www.bookwire.com/bookwire/
BookWire calls itself "the first place to look for book information," and it does offer an impressive number of features, including reviews from The Quarterly Black Review of Books, The Boston Book Review, The Asia Pacific Review, Computer Book Review, and others. The overall site is searchable by author, title, or publisher name, and the individual review sources can be browsed. There is a nice Frequently Asked Questions list about book publishing available also.

64. AETV.com Classroom Study Guides
This film shows us a very narrow view of life in victorian England, namely Charles Dickens, who is considered one of the greatest writers of the victorian era.
http://www.aetv.com/class/admin/study_guide/archives/aetv_guide.0814.html
Victoria and Albert (4 Parts)
Queen Victoria reigned over the British Empire for nearly sixty-four years, returning dignity and popularity to the British crown. Victoria assumed the crown in 1837, an inexperienced and seemingly unqualified girl of eighteen. For most of her life, Victoria had been controlled by her mother, with whom her relationship was very strained. Victoria married her cousin, Prince Albert of Germany, and quickly grew deeply devoted to him. Following the ouster of her first prime minister, Lord Melville, Victoria also became heavily dependent upon Albert as an advisor. The Queen often referred to her husband as “king in everything but name.” This story of Victoria and Albert’s life together traces their evolving relationship within the context of a modernizing British civilization. CURRICULUM LINKS Victoria and Albert is suitable for high school students in European history and literature classes. NATIONAL STANDARDS Victoria and Albert fulfills the following National Standards for World History for grades 5–12: Historical Thinking Standards 1 (Chronological Thinking), 2 (Historical Comprehension), and 3 (Historical Analysis and Interpretation) for Era 7, Standards 2 and 4. Regarding Discussion questions to follow:
Vocabulary
Discussion Questions
  • Opening scene (about 00:00 to 02:30): On the basis of this scene, what do you imagine the relationship between Victoria and Albert to be? What kind of person do you think Victoria is? Explain your answers, using specific details, actions, and words from the film to support your position.
  • 65. First Spiritual Temple: Victorian Evening With Spirit And Friends
    The victorian era has not died; it is fully alive in that era’s last remaining bastion of Christian Spiritualism Join us for a victorian Evening ~.
    http://www.fst.org/victeve.htm
    A Victorian Evening
    With Spirit and Friends An Experience Unlike Anything You Will Find
    In the Greater Boston Area. Hosted By The First Spiritual Temple
    16 Monmouth Street
    Brookline, MA 02446-5605 ~ A Victorian Evening With Spirit and Friends ~
    In 1885, during the Victorian period, you could walk down Newbury Street, in the Back Bay section of Boston, gently lit by the moon and the gas lights which adorned the street. Once you arrived at Exeter Street, you found yourself at the First Spiritual Temple. Upon entering the building, you were greeted by a brightly lit sanctuary, whose gas lit chandeliers shown brightly overhead. On the upper floor were classrooms, similarly lit, and, on the lower floor, were the Library and Study, where so many people came to experience the wonder and marvels of Spirit! Did you ever wonder what it might have felt like to spend an evening with friends and Spirit during that period of time? Well, we can’t go back 120 years and find ourselves in the old Temple building, nor can we bring back the old gas lights. But, we can recreate, today, the amazing wonder, mystery, and feeling of that Victorian era in the Library of the First Spiritual Temple, here, at 16 Monmouth Street, in Brookline! The Victorian era has not died; it is fully alive in that era’s last remaining bastion of Christian Spiritualism, the First Spiritual Temple, founded in 1883 by Marcellus Seth Ayer.

    66. The Charlock's Shade: Courting In The Victorian Era
    how big an impact it had back thenLucky Jim could be considered the first shot in the Oxbridge salvo that brought us Beyond the Courting in the victorian era.
    http://thecharlocksshade.typepad.com/the_charlocks_shade/2004/02/courting_in_the
    hostName = '.typepad.com';
    The Charlock's Shade
    poring over books not yet written, and seeing and seen by men not yet born
    Recent Posts
    Categories
    Authors
    • Scott M. P. Reid: A Bitter Trial: Evelyn Waugh and John Carmel Cardinal Heenan on the Liturgical Changes
      Henry Green (Henry Yorke): Loving

      "Loving stands, together with Living, as the masterpiece of this disciplined, poetic and grimly realistic, witty and melancholy, amorous and austere voluptuarycomic, richly entertaininghaunting and poeticwriter." - TLS (*****)
      Henry Green (Henry Yorke): Nothing

      The British writer Henry Green's literary skill went far beyond a comedy of manners, which this book appears to be on the surface. Dense with meaning, "Nothing" is a short literary gem, which forces the reader to read a million nuances into the witty and yet deeply dense conversations which make up the entirety of the book. (*****)
      Arnold Bennett: The Old Wives' Tale

      Published in 1908. This study of the changes wrought by time on the lives of two English sisters during the 19th century is a masterpiece of literary realism. Constance and Sophia Baines, the daughters of a shopkeeper, grow up in the rural town of Bursley. Sophia eventually runs off and settles in Paris with her husband, who is a cad, and Constance remains behind in England and marries the mild-mannered shop assistant. The sisters are reunited years later when they are old, and Bennett skillfully contrasts what has remained stable in their characters with the differences time and environment have produced in their personalities. This long and ambitious work established Bennett's reputation as a novelist. (*****)

    67. The Charlock's Shade: Marriage In The Victorian Era
    how big an impact it had back thenLucky Jim could be considered the first shot in the Oxbridge salvo that brought us Beyond the Marriage in the victorian era.
    http://thecharlocksshade.typepad.com/the_charlocks_shade/2004/02/marriage_in_the
    hostName = '.typepad.com';
    The Charlock's Shade
    poring over books not yet written, and seeing and seen by men not yet born
    Recent Posts
    Categories
    Authors
    • Scott M. P. Reid: A Bitter Trial: Evelyn Waugh and John Carmel Cardinal Heenan on the Liturgical Changes
      Henry Green (Henry Yorke): Loving

      "Loving stands, together with Living, as the masterpiece of this disciplined, poetic and grimly realistic, witty and melancholy, amorous and austere voluptuarycomic, richly entertaininghaunting and poeticwriter." - TLS (*****)
      Henry Green (Henry Yorke): Nothing

      The British writer Henry Green's literary skill went far beyond a comedy of manners, which this book appears to be on the surface. Dense with meaning, "Nothing" is a short literary gem, which forces the reader to read a million nuances into the witty and yet deeply dense conversations which make up the entirety of the book. (*****)
      Arnold Bennett: The Old Wives' Tale

      Published in 1908. This study of the changes wrought by time on the lives of two English sisters during the 19th century is a masterpiece of literary realism. Constance and Sophia Baines, the daughters of a shopkeeper, grow up in the rural town of Bursley. Sophia eventually runs off and settles in Paris with her husband, who is a cad, and Constance remains behind in England and marries the mild-mannered shop assistant. The sisters are reunited years later when they are old, and Bennett skillfully contrasts what has remained stable in their characters with the differences time and environment have produced in their personalities. This long and ambitious work established Bennett's reputation as a novelist. (*****)

    68. Review: Victorian Painting
    terribly different from our own Hollywoodstamped era with its Lambourne is wrong, but he leaves us with the As a first view of victorian painting, this book
    http://www.usc.edu/dept/LAS/english/19c/books/rev-0-7148-3776-8.html
    REVIEW
    Lambourne, Lionel
    Victorian Painting
    Phaidon, 1999, 512 pp., ISBN 0-7148-3776-8, $59.95
    Reviewed by David Stewart, University of Alabama in Huntsville
    Lionel Lambourne's Victorian Painting is as panoramic, as dazzling, and as multifaceted as the view of London from the new London Eye Ferris Wheel. From such a height one sees the world as a seamless whole. We see the East End and the West End, and we see Victorian painting from Holman Hunt to Lady Butler. The view is satisfying and complete. Lambourne's book sets before us what the nineteenth-century panorama set before its audience: a remarkable substitute for the real thing. Giving us the feeling that seeing what lies on the surface is understanding, Lambourne offers us the remarkable opportunity to come to know this period through the eye alone. Victorian Painting contains the finest collection of color reproductions of Victorian works that exists today. The text is another matter. It entertains and adds to the sense of spectacle, but, as with most survey texts, it sacrifices depth of textual analysis for breadth and sweep. Lambourne leads us as if he were a tour guide, allowing us to look long enough to be satisfied, but rarely long enough to dig in. He keeps us moving with entertaining anecdotes and broad generalizations but neglects context and analysis. Victorian Painting is an overview, and not a daring attempt to set art within the complex economic, political, social, literary, and philosophical contexts of its day. By contrast, Kenneth Bendiner's

    69. Review: Death And The Mother From Dickens To Freud
    familiar in periods before and after the victorian era, Dever examines relation between the absent mother and victorian texts, and helps us to understand
    http://www.usc.edu/dept/LAS/english/19c/books/rev-0-521-62280-8.html
    REVIEW
    Dever, Carolyn
    Death and the Mother from Dickens to Freud: Victorian Fiction and the Anxiety of Origins
    Cambridge University Press, 1998, xv + 233 pp., ISBN 0-521-62280-8, $49.95 Reviewed by David Toise, Long Island University, Brooklyn Campus
    Carolyn Dever's study, Death and the Mother from Dickens to Freud: Victorian Fiction and the Anxiety of Origins, traces the figure of the absent mother from that moment in the nineteenth century when "maternal loss develop[ed] from a structural device to a psychological phenomenon" (7). Dever follows the figure of the dead or lost mother from its instantiation in Dickens up until its "appropriation" by Freud (3), an appropriation central to Freud's narrative of psychological development. The study is thus concerned with connections between the textual production of fiction, shifting articulations of gender, and the history of psychoanalysis. Through sophisticated deconstructive readings, these interests are brought to bear on texts by Charles Dickens, William Wilkie Collins, George Eliot, Charles Darwin, and Virginia Woolf. Acknowledging that "[m]aternal absence is a plot device familiar in periods before and after the Victorian" era, Dever examines how a particular model of intersubjectivity, melancholia, is linked to the figure of the mother in the nineteenth century (22). Melancholia is defined by the refusal to let go of a lost object, a refusal that leads to the internalization of the lost object as part of the self. For Dever, Samuel Richardson's

    70. A Brief History Of Science And Technology
    a substance that was used in victorian shirt collars In addition, discoveries made during the era include amino and immediately contacted the us Weather Bureau
    http://www.erasofelegance.com/sciencehistory.html
    Your browser does not support script
    Click on a period of history for the key events and individuals in church history and other developments in science and technology. Ancient Medieval Renaissance Elizabethan ... Edwardian
    A BRIEF HISTORY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
    We invite you to learn about the achievements of humankind in discovering, studying and creating the world as we know it. ANCIENT Similarly, the ancient Egyptians also discovered ways to dominate the land and thus, made a number of strides in agricultural technology. The Egyptians developed a range of agricultural tools, such as hoes, rakes, scoops, sickles and plows, usually constructed from wood and stone. The Egyptians also learned to exploit animal labor, and frequently used pigs and sheep to trample the ground and soften it up. Donkeys were used to trample the harvested stalks and separate the grain. Perhaps their greatest achievement, however, was developing a carefully organized system of dikes and irrigation ditches with which they managed the annual flooding and silting of the Nile and thereby allowed to grow a rich bounty of grains. MEDIEVAL Among the early Medieval civilizations, the Maya are remembered for being advanced mathematicians and astronomers. They developed the most complex writing system of Mesoamerica, with ideographic and pictographic symobls, as well as systems for coordinating astronomical events with territorial history. Their detailed writings revealed precise mathematical notations as well as use of the concept of zero. The Incas of the fifteenth century continued this tradition of innovation, practicing sophisticated medicine, including brain surgery. The Incas skillfully constructed bridges, tunnels, aqueducts, terraces and buildings. They were also advanced metallurgists, lining the Temples of the Sun and Moon at Cuzco with gold and silver.

    71. English Language And Literature Resources
    of links to background information about the Medieval era. England Converts Elizabethan Pounds to us Dollars interested in Romantic and victorian literature and
    http://dewey.chs.chico.k12.ca.us/engl.html
    English Language and Literature Resources
    Shakespeare
    Whitman
    Irving
    Cather
    Hurst
    Hurston
    Faulkner
    Ellison
    You may go directly to the following sections on this page below:
    Books and Books Online
    Book Reviews and Criticism Drama Resources General Information ... English As A Second Language

    For those who already have language. Reading List (CA Dept. of Education ): Full List , or by Interest/Level Lists of Book Awards General Information Mr. Quist's Poetry Research Assignment Resources Mr. McKay's Research Project Resources: Teen Dating Violence This is a collection of links to information about dating violence and "date rape". It has been gathered to support the research projects by the students of Mr. McKay's English classes. Mr. Mathews' Symbolism Project Symbolism Dictionary Look up a symbol and find its meaning. "This symbolism dictionary endeavors to provide some possible cultural significances of various symbols, and suggest ways in which those symbols may have been used in context." You may go to the Art Page to see how artists have used symbolism in their art. For more symbols, see:

    72. About Mourning Matters
    set as it would be for a wake in the victorian era. of mourning garb of the 1860 s (more era s to come) era. IUK To book an event or lecture send us a detailed
    http://www.mourningmatters.com/mourningmattersbio.html
    About Mourning Matters WHAT: Mourning Matters is a special and educational program with a focus on educating the public on the history of American funeral traditions and mourning customs.
    HOW: The Mourning Matters program is given both in a living history setting and as a lecture. In a Living History setting the room is set as it would be for a wake in the Victorian era. Windows and mirrors are draped in black, coffin placed in room with appropriate set up and decor for a wake. The presenters are dressed in different stages of mourning garb of the 1860's (more era's to come) era. Interpretation can be given in first or third person.
    A Lecture form is given with overheads and given while dressed in mourning clothing of the 1860's.
    WHERE: The program can be given in almost any setting.
    A review of the area can determine which form of interpretation would be best for your site.
    WHEN: Mourning Matters can be booked for hourly, daily or extended events.
    WHY:Mourning is a subject that impacts everyone. The subject of mourning provides insight of how world events, medical care, and European influence had affected American belief and practice in regards to a death. A look into the customs of the past awakens our awareness of the culture of today, and gives reason to what we now hold as tradition.
    WHO: Kim Parr and Stephanie Tomasi.

    73. Course Descriptions
    emphasis on the victorian era. Alternate years. 382x. us Foreign Policy. See IR 378. 391. Topics in History. Selected areas of historical study as announced.
    http://www.wheaton.edu/History/course_descriptions.htm
    History Home About the Dept. Faculty Courses ... Resources 105. World Civilization . A survey of world civilization in Christian perspective from the Renaissance to the present. World Civilization provides the chronological, geographical, and cultural breadth that serves as a contextualizing vehicle for the liberal arts. Attention given to moral issues of history. Meets general education requirement. 115. World Civilization to 1600 . A study of the ancient Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, and European roots of modern western civilization through the Renaissance/Reformation era. Some attention given to contemporaneous developments in Asia. Emphasis is directed towards the identification of the intellectual foundations of the western traditions in a comparative perspective. Meets general education requirement. 131. Problems in World Civilization . Selected topics in world history discussed in the light of liberal arts and Christian thought and values. Not open to students who have completed History 105 or 115. Applies to requirement only as recommended by History Chair. See General Education requirements, Studies in Society. (2) 229x. African-American Experience

    74. AN ERA GONE BY WEBRING
    is a group of women who study the past Join us for newsletters, a magazine, message board, book with all my favorite things, including victorian era things and
    http://www.ringsurf.com/netring?action=info&ring=eragoneby

    75. University Of Arizona Study Abroad And Student Exchange
    was many years later than the us, so the victorian era buildings and statues are abundant in the central To learn more about our study abroad opportunities
    http://studyabroad.arizona.edu/
    Search Programs View All Programs
    Welcome! SASE offers opportunities for foreign study on a summer, semester, and yearly basis, while earning academic credit at home Universities. In addition to operating its own programs, SASE counsels students on study abroad programs available through other American universities, private companies, and foreign universities. We also offer an extensive library of literature and videotapes on specific programs. Our goals are to expand the range of academic options available to students, increase the number of students studying abroad, and assist in making foreign study financially possible.
    Whats New
    Spring 2005 applications due October 15th
    Talk to one of our advisors for more information A World of Knowledge...
    Study abroad for a summer, a semester, or even a year! Search for a program that suits your needs. Please e-mail us with any questions, or to request information regarding our program.
    Destinations 2005 Highlight: Australia
    The Land Down Under evokes enchanting images of kangaroos, koalas and boomerangs. Even though the physical environment is very different, Australia has many similarities with the United States. Both countries were established as British colonies; both were initially populated by convicts and indentured servants; and both countries share a common language, legal and educational systems.

    76. BOOK FORUM--Reading The Biographer's Tale
    But in an era of formal indeterminacy and cross by extension the neglected field of victorian nonfiction prose More importantly, biography offers us a chance to
    http://iupjournals.org/victorian/vic44-3.html
    from Victorian Studies Volume 44, Number 3 BOOK FORUM
    Reading The Biographer's Tale
    Erin O'Connor
    Permission to Copy You may download, save, or print for your personal use without permission. If you wish to disseminate the electronic article, or to produce multiple copies for classroom or educational use, please request permission from:
    Professional Relations Department
    222 Rosewood Drive
    Danvers MA 01923 FAX: 978-750-4470/4744
    Web address: For other permissions or reprint use contact: Rights and Permissions, Journals Division
    Indiana University Press
    601 North Morton St.
    Bloomington, IN 47404 FAX: 812 855-8507
    E-mail: journals@indiana.edu
    T o say that the most exciting work of literary criticism I have read recently is A. S. Byatt's new novel, The Biographer's Tale (2001), may seem to be a contradiction in terms: novels are not scholarly monographs, novelists are not critics (not, at any rate, in the moment of novel-writing), and the distinction, at least as far as hiring and promotion committees are concerned, must be maintained. But in an era of formal indeterminacy and cross-disciplinarity, such distinctions often feel a bit spurious. In Victorian studies, no one makes the distinction look more so than Byatt, who has done her finest writing about both the Victorian period and professional literary study from within the confines of fiction. Byatt left her own dissertation unfinished, and she left univer‚sity teaching in 1983. Yet she has continued to be a consummate scholar, a writer of great range and erudition, a Victorianist who does Victorian studies not by writing rarified treatises for tiny audiences of specialists, but by writing intelligent, searching fiction for the general public. What Byatt does so well, in

    77. Victorian Era
    yourself). Years of study 1816, 1817, 1833, 1840. 1845, 1846, 1847, 1848. 1852, 1859, 1860, 1861. 1863, 1869, 1888, 1901. Return to victorian era.
    http://www.fortbend.k12.tx.us/library/KHS_VictEra.htm
    VICTORIAN ERA
    In this project, students will apply the Information Problem Solving Approach to do research on the Victorian Era.
    The Big6
  • Task Definition What am I supposed to do?
    Ms. Anderson

    Ms. Smallwood
    What information do I need?
  • Information Seeking Strategies What are the possible sources of information I can use? What are the best sources for this assignment?
  • Location and Access Where will I find these sources? Kempner High School Library Public Access Catalog (PAC) Fort Bend County Libraries Do I know how to use them? How to use Internet Search Engines Using Search Engines
  • Use of Information How will I record information? How will I evaluate the information?.
  • Synthesis How is the information best presented? How will I credit my sources?
  • Evaluation
  • Possible Sources of Information
    BOOKS REFERENCE
    Chronicle of Britain (R 941 CHR) Chronicle of the World (R 909 CHR) Encyclopedia of Britain (R 941 ENC) Encyclopedia of romanticism: Culture in Britain, 1780's - 1830's (R 941.07 ENC)

    78. Include File
    www.cafeatlantique.us. of Art and Archeology and the Doris Stevens Professor of the Study of Women Ocean Flowers Impressions From Nature in the victorian era.
    http://www.artscouncil-newhaven.org/artscalendar/June04/i_talks-tours-films.htm
    Talks, Tours and Films
    Free Walking Tours of Yale Campus. Leave from the Yale Visitor Center, 149 Elm Street. Monday-Friday, 10:30am and 2pm; Saturday and Sunday, 1:30pm. 432-2300. Highlight Tours . Saturday and Sunday, 12 and 1pm. Peabody Museum of Natural History, 170 Whitney Avenue. 432-5099. Masterpiece Tours of the permanent collection. Yale Art Gallery, 1111 Chapel Street. Saturdays, 1:30pm; Sundays, 3pm. 432-0600. 2 Wednesday
    Shakespeare Round Table
    . The Elm Shakespeare Company and Shoreline Arts Alliance invite you to attend a discussion on this year's production of Richard III Special Exhibition Talk Stagestruck to Ruckus , Robin Jaffee Frank, associate curator of American paintings and sculpture, and Nancy Kuhl, assistant curator, Beinecke Library. Yale Art Gallery, 1111 Chapel Street. 12:20pm. 432-0600. 4 Friday
    Cinema Atlantique
    . Outdoor film screenings, weather permitting. Café Atlantique, 33 River St., Milford. 8:30pm. 203-882-1602. www.cafeatlantique.us

    79. Research Fellowships Awarded [Press Release]
    Lincoln for a biographical study of us Supreme Court College, University of Cambridge for a study of plantation a Southern City from the victorian era to the
    http://www.vahistorical.org/news/pr_mellon04.htm
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 17, 2004 Contact: Maribeth Cowan, Public Relations Director
    (804) 342-9665 email: maribeth@vahistorical.org
    VIRGINIA HISTORICAL SOCIETY AWARDS
    RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS
    The Mellon Fellowship program, now in its seventeenth year, was initially endowed by a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation in 1987. Since then, contributions from other sources have enabled the VHS to create these additional fellowships: the Frances Lewis Fellowships in women's studies, the Betty Sams Christian Fellowships in business history, and the Reese Fellowships in American Bibliography and the History of the Book in the Americas. More than 400 researchers have received fellowships since the program's creation. For Fellowships information, visit www.vahistorical.org VIRGINIA HISTORICAL SOCIETY FELLOWSHIP RECIPIENTS FOR 2004 Paul C. Anderson of Clemson University for researching a cultural history of the Shenandoah Valley. Jacob Blosser of the University of South Carolina for researching the dissertation, "Pursuing Happiness: Latitudinarianism and the Anglo-American Mind." Douglas M. Bradburn

    80. Las Positas College Guide To English & Literature Resources
    Twayne s Author Series covers us, English, and World the history and times of victorian England, including wonderful overview of a significant era in England s
    http://lpc1.clpccd.cc.ca.us/lpc/lrc/literature.html
    Las Positas College Library
    Information
    Quick Links Library Catalog Site Map ... Internet Links
    Includes 18th Century Internet Links LPC Internet Databases
    Useful Internet Resources
    Print Reference Resources Works Cited
    LPC Internet Databases
    Click on Quick Links for Literature Resource Center - provides "access to biographies, bibliographies, and critical analyses of authors from every age and literary discipline. Combining ... core literary databases in a single online service, the Literature Resource Center covers more than 120,000 novelists, poets, essayists, journalists, and other writers, with in-depth coverage of 2,500 of the most-studied authors. Some of the resources included are:
    • Dictionary of Literary Biography provides "biographical and critical studies written by scholars and academics...[and] presents bibliographic information about each author's writings as well as sources for further reading.
      Scribner Writers Series includes some 1,600 full-text articles on writers and literary genres. Each article concludes with a bibliography of primary and secondary sources for further study.
      Twayne's Author Series

    Other useful databases and Internet web sites include:
    • Dictionary of Literary Biograpy (Gale) - A list of the DLB volumes by volume number, title, and call number owned by LPC Library and shelved in the Reference section.

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