[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/



The Richard Stockton Text Project
          Texts Annotated By Many Hands

 
Stockton College

The Literature Program

popup label help

Project Migration



 
 
For several years, students enrolled in Introduction to Literary Research at The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey have studied selected texts, annotated them, and then placed them on the web. Below are the fruits of this labor.


Slavery in New England, by Catharine Maria Sedgwick, annotated in Literary Research, Spring 2006.

The Historical Register for the Year 1736, by Henry Fielding, annoted in Literary Research, Spring 2006.

The Narrative of the Captivity and the Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, annotated in Literary Research, Fall 2005.

Poor Will's Almanack for the Year of our Lord 1790, annotated in Literary Research, Spring 2005.

Leaves of Grass Hypertext Project, annotated in Literary Research, Fall 2004,

The Jew of Malta Hypertext Project, annotated in Literary Research, Spring 2004.

The Heart of Darkness: The Hypertext Annotation, annotated in Literary Research, Fall 2003.

The American Weekly Mercury: Philadelphia's 1st Newspaper, annotated in Literary Research, Fall 2002, Spring 2003.

"A Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point," Elizabeth Barrett Browning, annotated in Literary Research, Spring 2002.

"Lady Geraldine's Courtship," Elizabeth Barrett Browning, annotated in Literary Research, Spring 2002.

"Caliban Upon Setebos," Robert Browning, annotated in Literary Research, Fall 2001.

"A Grammarian's Funeral," Robert Browning, annotated in Literary Research, Fall 2001.

"The Pleasures of Melancholy," Thomas Wharton, annotated in Literary Research, Spring 2001.

The Deserted Village, Oliver Goldsmith, annotated in Literary Research, Fall 2000.


Other Class Projects

The Cape May Murders, a collaborative mystery written in Detective Fiction, Fall 2005. Later made into an award winning podcast, Deadly Season.

The American Short Story Project, a celebration of American stories, Summer 2005.

High Wire, a collaborative novel written by the students in LITT 2131 (The Great American Novel), Spring 2005.

Victorian Novels created in the Victorian Literature class, Spring 2002.

James Joyce's Ulysses created in the Modern British Novel class, Fall 2002.

Tripping: A Novel created in the Great American Novel, Fall 2001.

In a Similar Vein, created in Literary Methodologies, Fall 2001.

A Killer Semester, created in Detective Fiction, Spring 2000.

Five Essays on the Internet and transmission of Texts, created in Literary Theory and Criticism, Fall 1997.

A Shade of Tain: Revisiting an Irish Epic, created by Athena Segada, 1996.

Ralph Meets Chaucer, created in Senior Seminar, Spring 1995.

Notes on Eighteenth-Century Authorship, created by students in Johnson & Boswell, Spring 1994.







 




Last update: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 at 11:53:47 AM.