Paper Style
Sheet:This is the definitive style guide for papers written in this
class. Please follow it closely.
Required Online Readings, roughly in order of class coverage (updated
regularly: see syllabus for full bibliographic citation and dates of reading
assignments)
The Scholarly Journal
Archive (JSTOR is a not-for-profit organization with a dual mission
to create and maintain a trusted archive of important scholarly journals,
and to provide access to these journals as widely as possible. JSTOR
offers researchers the ability to retrieve high-resolution, scanned
images of journal issues and pages as they were originally designed,
printed, and illustrated. Content in JSTOR spans many disciplines.
For lists of currently available titles and collections, please refer
to: http://www.jstor.org/about/collection.list.html).
The
Serials Master File is an innovative Web reference service for
serials and collection development librarians, historians, bibliographers,
scholars and students, providing access to information on over 37,000
serials.
The
Romantics Page (On this page you'll find links to course syllabi,
information, bibliographies, faculty and other web sites related
to British and American Romanticism).
The Victorian Web
(web resources for everything Victorian: political history, social
history, gender matters, philosophy, religion, science, literature,
etc.)
Victorian
Studies (leading periodical on the Victorian period, some
issues available online)
Victorian
Links: links on Victorian history, literature, art, religion
Poole's Plus: The Digital Index of the Nineteenth Century (enter
from Carnegie
Mellon Library databases page): a master file of published
works in the 19th century
Science
in the Nineteenth-Century Periodical (The Science in the Nineteenth-Century
Periodical (SciPer) project is jointly organised by the Centre
for Nineteenth-Century Studies in the Department of English Literature
at the University of Sheffield and the Division of History and
Philosophy of Science in the School of Philosophy at the University
of Leeds...The aim of the project is to identify and analyse the
representation of science, technology and medicine, as well as
the inter-penetration of science and literature, in the general
periodical press in Britain between 1800 and 1900.")