Sources on the Web
Sources on the internet are not uniformly reliable, but new online technologies are expanding and transforming study of the field. For a more extensive listing, go to the links Romanticism on the Net, Romantic Resources on the Web, and Romantic Links, all listed below.
If you use sources from the internet in your written work, consult the MLA Handbook for proper citation of online texts.
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The Blake Archive
Texts and images from Blake's books and watercolors. It includes a description of Blake's process of illuminated printing: click “About Blake” and “Illuminated Printing.”
Eighteenth-Century Resources
An invaluable site devoted to eighteenth-century culture and society, with work on Romantic writers.
Romantic Chronology
An extensive timeline of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, now with extensive search capabilities. Recommended.
Romantic Circles
Perhaps the best Romanticism resource on the Web. Features newly edited electronic texts, conference and publication announcements, and many other scholarly resources. Contains The Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Chronology & Resource Site, which provides a detailed chronology of Mary Shelley's life and work.
Romantic-Era Women Writers
Award-winning site containing valuable information on women writers of the Romantic period.
Romanticism on the Net
A peer-reviewed electronic journal devoted to study of the Romantics: contains articles, reviews, conferences, and links to other sites.
Romanticism
An excellent on-line journal devoted to Romantic poetry and prose.
UMKC Libs: Guide to British Romanticism
A helpful guide to library resources on British Romanticism, including references to books, articles, and web sources.
The Romantics Page
This site has links to course syllabi, information, bibliographies, and other web sites related to both British and American Romanticism.
Romantic Links, Electronic Texts, Home Pages, and Syllabi
UMKC Libs: Guide to British Romanticism
A very thorough site, as its name suggests. Highly recommended.
Romantic Web
This site appears within a massive analytical index for scholarly websites of all kinds. This section is devoted to British Romanticism and is subdivided into "General Resources," "Authors, Works, Projects," "Selected Topics," "Course Syllabi & Teaching Resources," "Criticism & Critics," "Journals & Series," "Listservs & Newsgroups," "Conferences & Calls for Papers," and "Post-Romanticism." A basic and important resource.
Tips on reading and textual explication
A useful site with advice on how to read poems. Especially good for undergraduates.
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