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English 2310: World Literature I
Links
General World Literature Sites
Bedford St. Martin's World Literature Page has materials and links specifically designed to go with your book.
Voice of the Shuttle is a mammoth literature directory, with links to sites on literature from all periods and places. Some of the linked sites are not in English.
Perseus, sponsored by Tufts University, has extensive selections in Classical and Renaissance literature. Some of the Classical pieces are in the original, but they are labeled. They even have maps.
Project Gutenberg is an extensive e-text site. Because all the texts are public domain, all the translations are over 70 years old. There are no footnotes, endnotes, or indexes to help you read and understand the texts. But they are all free.
Homer, The Iliad
Professor John Porter's Iliad Page contains a book-by-book outline of the Iliad, plus character lists. Used with Professor Porter's kind permission.
The Trojan War in Art shows various episodes of the Trojan War, depicted on various art objects (usually vases and jars) from the Ancient Greek period. All these pieces are in the British Museum, which sponsors this site.
Sophocles, Oedipus Rex
Walter Englbert's Greek Theater Page, developed for a humanities class, has a great deal of information. Especially nice are the photo of the ruins of an ancient Greek theater (click to enlarge) and the diagram of a Greek theater halfway down the page.
Greek Landscapes, a tourist site, offers a page of photos of Ancient Greek theaters.
In Poetics, Aristotle the philosopher and tutor of Alexander the Great argues that Oedipus Rex is an ideally constructed tragedy. Brought to you by Project Gutenberg.
Aristophanes, Lysistrata
Old Testament
Virgil, The Aeneid
This study guide for the Aeneid from the Classics Technology Center offers background, study questions, and an interesting quiz.
Virgil.org is a comprehensive Virgil site, with a biography of Virgil, texts and translations, background and history, a wealth of links, and cool maps, including this one of Aeneas's travels in Italy.
New Testament
Beowulf
An excerpt from Benjamin Bagby's performance of Beowulf in the original Old English. Bagby does a tour circuit, performing Beowulf at colleges and conferences. He accompanies himself on an Anglo-Saxon style harp, while subtitles flash behind him so the audience can follow the story.
The British Library's Beowulf page gives information both on the manuscript and on the poem. The page also includes a picture of the first page of the manuscript. The British Library owns the Beowulf manuscript.
The University of Nevada, Reno, provides Resources for the Study of Beowulf: links, editions, translations, archaeology, Beowulf in the movies, and all sorts of goodies.
Visit the British Museum on-line Anglo-Saxon tour, and Go to Room 41 and view the Sutton Hoo artifacts. In the early 600s, a king was buried with an astounding number of treasures and goods at Sutton Hoo. As the grave dates to the Anglo-Saxon era, it may well be that these are the sorts of treasures the original audience would have pictured.
Geoffrey de Monmouth, History of the Kings of England
Marie de France, "Lanval" and "Bisclavet"
Arthuriana, a journal devoted to scholarship on King Arthur, offers this audio excerpt from "Lanval" in the original Old French. Click on the MP3 link to listen.
Chretien de Troyes, Lancelot
Boccaccio, The Decameron
One Thousand and One Nights
Christine de Pizan
Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince
Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus
William Shakespeare, Othello
Shakespeare's Globe. In the 1990s, Sam Wanamaker spearheaded the project to build a reproduction of Shakespeare's Globe Theater near the spot where it originally stood. The Globe's official web site has all kinds of information and photos, and even at virtual tour.
Lope de Vega, Fuenteovejuna
John Milton, Paradise Lost
Aztec Myths
This facsimile of selections from the Codex Boturini not only lets you see pictures of the original codex, but has translations by Karl Young.
Aztec Script, by Ancient Scripts.com, gives both an explanation and some illustrations of Aztec writing.
M. Wendy Hennequin created this page for her English 2310 class at Tennessee State University, Fall 2007. Creation date: Sept. 7, 2007. Last update: March 14, 2008.