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Department of English

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Web Resources for British Literature (1660-Present)

Below you'll find web links for British history and culture, literary movements, and for the authors we're reading this semester. Some sites are better than others; as always when using the web, evaluate not only the quantity of the information presented, but its quality (the source of that information or its sponsor, date uploaded, etc.).

British History and Culture

Historical Background
  • Peter Williams' Narrative History of England (from Britannia).
  • The Houses of Parliment homepage provides information on the United Kingdom's Parliment, including the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The "Introduction to Parliment" page has links to resources on the buildings, history, laws, procedures, and people of Parliment.
  • The Eighteenth-Century England site (University of Michigan) features various resources on 18th c. life, including resources on food, army life, advertising, and marriage.
  • The BBC's "History Trail" for Victorian England offers a range of information about every-day life in England during the 19th century, including a section on "The Ideals of Womanhood."
  • Wilfred Owen Multimedia Archive: an on-line archive with material on Wilfred Owen and WWI which offers an incredibly deep resource, including digital facsimiles of all of his war poetry, a selection of his letters and photographs, and his personal records. In addition, the archive has c.50 Video Clips from the 1916 films 'The Battle of the Somme' and 'The Battle of the Ancre: The Advance of the Tanks' (QuickTime and MPEG); 100 Audio Clips from interviews with veterans from the Great War [needs a RealAudio Player]; 250 Photographs of the Western Front (1914-1918); 250 Modern Photographs of the Western Front; and c.30 Modern Video Clips of the Western Front. (Most of the photos were taken from the collections of the Imperial War Museum.)
  • The Partition of India provides maps before and after partition, a timeline of British presence in India (1600-1971), a discussion of the reasons for partition, and further resources.
  • Also see the General Literary Resources below for more information on post-imperialism and post-colonialism.

Cultural Contexts

Art
The Booker Prize
Current Media
Fashion and Costume
Landscape Gardening

General Literary Resources

Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Resources
  • Romantic Chronology, edited by Professors Laura Mandell and Alan Liu, is an incredibly powerful resource, since it allows you to search by date to retrieve hyperlinked information about the period's authors or events. You can also search the site by topic.
  • Eighteenth Century Resources, edited by Professor Jack Lynch, provides a search engine to search the site for key words as well as offering pages organized by topic. The Literature page has links to general resources, bibliographies, and individual author pages.
  • Age of Enlightenment, edited by Professor Nancy B. Mautz, offers resources on British, American, and European contributions to 17th and 18th century thought and culture. Resources are organized by topic, including History (people, places, events) and Art (art and architecture, literature and drama, music and dance, daily life and culture).
  • Eighteenth Century Studies provides an extensive list of links to e-texts of works by eighteenth-century authors, organized by author and topic. Some bibliographic information, too.
  • For cultural context, visit the Eighteenth Century England site (University of Michigan).
Nineteenth-Century Resources
Modernism Resources
Contemporary Resources
Colonial and Postcolonial Literary Resources
Postmodernism
Popular Literature Resources
  • Stanford University's Dime Novels and Penny Dreadfuls provides information on its Dime Novel and Story Paper Collection, stories which were popular from the middle to the close of the 19th century in England and America.

Authors

Chinua Achebe
Matthew Arnold
Aphra Behn
Rupert Brooke
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Robert Browning
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Joseph Conrad
  • The Victorian Web provides pages on Conrad, including a biography and information about the initial publication of Heart of Darkness in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine in February, March, and April of 1899.
T. S. Eliot
George Farquhar
  • An engaging biography of Farquhar, written in 1906, provides information about his life and his work.
Thomas Hardy
Seamus Heaney
Samuel Johnson
John Keats
Philip Larkin
John Stuart Mill
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
  • Renascence Editions offers a biography of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, as well as annotated e-texts of selected poems and prose.
  • The entry for Montagu at Britannica.com provides biographical information and a picture.
Wilfred Owen
  • Wilfred Owen Multimedia Archive is the best resource for information on Owen and WWI. Its pages provide an incredibly deep resource, including digital facsimiles of all of his war poetry, a selection of his letters and photographs, and his personal records.
Alexander Pope
  • A biography of Pope with links to portraits of the artist provided by S. Constantine (University of Massachusetts).
  • The Alexander Pope Page has a later portrait of Pope as well as links to e-texts of his work.
  • Another portrait of Pope in later years.
Christina Rossetti
  • The Christina Rossetti page at the Victoria Web places Rossetti's life and her works in the context of the Victorian period.
  • The Victoria Web also has a page dedicated to Rossetti's "Goblin Market," including the text of the poem alongside some of Dante Gabriel Rossetti's illustrations for his sister's work. You can also go directly to links for selected illustrations for "Goblin Market" by Rossetti and by Lawrence Houseman.
Siegfried Sassoon
Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • The Victorian Web jumps back a bit in literary history to offer resources on P. B. Shelley, including a biography.
Mary Shelley
Wole Soyinka
  • The "Wole Soyinka" page at the site for Contemporary Postcolonial and Postimperial Literature in English, has links to short critical commentaries as well as some historical and political contexts for Phillips' work.
  • A biography of Soyinka and an overview of his literary work and artistic practice, with links to a bibliography and interviews, sponsored by the Stanford Presidential Lectures and Symposia in the Humanities and Arts.
  • A detailed interview with Soyinka (16 April 1998), sponsored by the "Conversations with History" series at U of California Berkeley; the subjects range from Soyinka's early years to his work for the theater and his political activism.
  • Listen (or watch) Wole Soyinka read his work at Harvard's Du Bois Institute (21 April 2003).
Tom Stoppard
  • The Stagecraft of Tom Stoppard offers biographical and bibliographical, as well as stage histories for some of his work.
  • Professor Jay Clayton (Vanderbilt University) and his students have created a hyperlinked glossary of terms for Stoppard's Arcadia, keyed by scene and page number.
  • Professor Robert L. Devaney (Boston University) offers "an animated description of some of the mathematical ideas lurking in the background of Tom Stoppard's play Arcadia."
  • A review of Stoppard's Arcadia published in Scientific American.
Jonathan Swift
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Derek Walcott
Oscar Wilde
  • The Victorian Web pages on Oscar Wilde offer a brief biography.
  • The Official Web Site of Oscar Wilde offers a more detailed biography, as well as links to a wonderful page of photographs of Wilde.
  • Another set of photographs is available from the archives of the Clark Library.
  • Oscarina, a fascinating web project, traces Wilde's life and others' views of Wilde by using excerpts of primary documents, such as Wilde's letters to Lord Douglas, to his wife, the offending letters and visiting cards that precipitated his trials, excerpts from his trials, and letters after he was released from prison.
John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester
  • A brief biography of Wilmot offers some historical background about his life as well as links to some of his poems.
Mary Wollstonecraft
Virginia Woolf
William Wordsworth
  • The Wordsworth Page has links to a detailed biography of Wordsworth and to a collection of images of the poet at different periods of his life.
  • Norton Topics Online: The Romantic Period provides some cultural context for Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey," including information on British tourism in the late 18th century, excerpts from the popular travel writer Thomas Gilpin on the Wye valley and Tintern Abbey, and the landscape painter Claude Lorrain.
  • Read about the Enclosure Acts in the 18th century, which transformed the countryside, and about the many styles of hedges used around England.
W.B. Yeats