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THE |
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a cache of usenet and other text files pertaining
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To: alt.mythology
From: callery@leland.Stanford.EDU (Anne Elizabeth Callery)
Subject: Arthurian Internet Guide
Date: 49940819
A BRIEF GUIDE TO ARTHURIAN RESOURCES ON THE INTERNET
by
Anne Callery
(callery@krypton.stanford.edu)
The Internet is a constantly growing universe of information. The
information comes from all subject areas and ranges from the serious
to the silly. Because of the nature of the Internet, this guide
cannot be considered to be either comprehensive or exhaustive.
Information on the Internet is constantly evolving. Materials are
always being added, or existing materials are superseded or moved to a
new location. The following lists show some basic resources, many of
which will lead the user to other interesting areas as well. The
Internet is a scrambled mess of information; we just need to dig
around a little to discover its treasures!
The sections of this guide are grouped by type of resource, with the
exception of the Labyrinth, a valuable WWW resource which gets its own
section. It is assumed that the reader of this guide has some working
knowledge of the Internet and how to use it.
CONTENTS
I. Etexts
II. Articles and references
III. Bibliographies
IV. Discussion
V. Audio-Visual resources
VI. The Labyrinth
I. ETEXTS
----------
SIR GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT
The following text is in Middle English, from Tolkien's second
edition.
gopher riceinfo.rice.edu
--> Information by Subject Area
--> Literature
--> Electronic Books and Journals
filename: Gawayne and the Grene Knight
ftp ota.ox.ac.uk
/ota/english/Anon
filename: gawain.1680
ALLITERATIVE MORTE ARTHURE AND LAYAMON'S BRUT
Following are a few more relevant items available from the Oxford
Text Archive, but not through anonymous ftp. To obtain an order
form, ftp to ota.ox.ac.uk, cd ota, and get textarchive.form. The
form must be returned in hard copy, via mail or fax. There is a
charge for texts delivered on tape or disk. To obtain the texts
free of charge, request a password to download the texts via ftp.
U-535-A Alliterative Morte Arthure, ed. Valerie Krishna
U*-62-A Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knyght, ed. Tolkien and
Gordon, revised by Davis
U-1680-A Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knyght, ed. Tolkien and Gordon
U-85-C [Layamon's] Brut, ed. G.L. Brook and R.F. Leslie
U-1682-C [Layamon's] Brut, ed. G.L. Brook and R.F. Fisher
The "U" prefix means that the text is freely available for
scholarly use in private research. The "U*" prefix means that the
text may also be used for teaching purposes. The suffix indicates
the size of the file. "A" is less than 512K, and "C" is 1-2M.
A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT
This humorous novel by Mark Twain is about a contemporary
Connecticut man who goes back in time to the court of King Arthur
in the medieval England of knights in shining armor... (The first
source is from Project Gutenberg, a constantly growing collection
of electronic texts.)
ftp mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu
/pub/etext/etext93
filename: yanke11.txt
ftp nic.funet.fi
/pub/doc/literary/etext
filename: yankee.mt.gz
gopher wiretap.spies.com
--> Electronic Books at Wiretap
filename: Mark Twain: A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's
Court
THE WIFE OF BATH'S TALE
This story from Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is about a
knight of King Arthur who is charged with rape and is told he will
be set free if he can find the truth about "what women really
want". This version is in Modern English.
gopher english-server.hss.cmu.edu
--> Books
--> Books for Free
--> Geoffrey Chaucer
--> Canterbury Tales
filename: w_bath_t
gopher gopher.bev.net
--> Library
--> Electronic Books
--> Books (courtesy of the Eris Project)
--> Geoffrey Chaucer
filename: Canterbury Tales (w_bath_t)
II. ARTICLES AND REFERENCES
----------------------------
An article theorizing about the historical King Arthur, by John C.
Rudmin and Joseph W. Rudmin. (It can also be requested via email from
one of the authors: fac_rudmin@vax1.acs.jmu.edu.)
ftp dirac.phys.jmu.edu
filenames: art1; art2; art.app
The following articles are available from a single source:
ftp sapphire.epcc.ed.ac.uk
/pub/camelot/Interesting
The etymological links between Avalon and Arran (filename: arran)
"An Introduction to Current Theories about the Holy Grail"
(filename: grail.txt)
"The Lost Island of Glastonbury" (about the death of Arthur)
(filename: isle_of_glastonbury)
The Bryn Mawr Medieval Review will sometimes cover topics of interest
to Arthurian scholars. Individual issues and articles can be accessed
through gopher, or you can subscribe to the journal via its mailing
list.
gopher gopher.lib.virginia.edu
--> Subject organization
--> Language and Literature
--> BMMR
BMMR-L@cc.brynmawr.edu
A dictionary of feudal terms may come in handy when reading texts.
ftp ftp.spies.com
/Library/Article/Socio
filename: feudal.dic
III. BIBLIOGRAPHIES
--------------------
This "FAQ of Arthurian Literature" covers all genres, from medieval to
science fiction.
ftp rtfm.mit.edu
/pub/usenet/news.answers/books
filename: arthurian
The "Arthurian Reading List" offers a wide variety of material,
including even computer games.
ftp sapphire.epcc.ed.ac.uk
/pub/camelot/Interesting
filename: booklist1.1.Z
This bibliography is actually part of a history course description,
but the reading list is quite large.
ftp ftp2.cc.ukans.edu
/pub/history/Europe/Medieval/bibliographies
filename: arthur.bib
In addition to a brief bibliography, this FAQ contains such features
as a table of name variations and an introduction to the Holy Grail
legend.
ftp sapphire.epcc.ed.ac.uk
/pub/camelot/Interesting
filename: FAQ.Z
The "Online Chaucer Bibliography" is a source for literature about the
Chaucerian period. Many items relevant to the study of medieval
Arthurian literature are listed here.
telnet utsaibm.utsa.edu
at "enter application request" prompt, type library
select local, then chau
(helpful hint: to exit the database, type stop)
The Arthurian legend is a very popular topic for science fiction. If
you know of an author and you want to know more about her/his work,
retrieve that file from the science fiction authors listed.
ftp nic.funet.fi
/pub/doc/literary/bibliographies
filenames include: Bradley_M; Powers_T; Stewart_M
If you want to read science fiction book reviews, try this moderated
newsgroup. (See also the newsgroups listed in the DISCUSSION section
of this guide.)
USENET rec.arts.sf.reviews
IV. DISCUSSION
---------------
MAILING LISTS AND LISTSERVS
arthurnet@morgan.ucs.mun.ca Arthurian topics
albion-l@ucsbvm.bitnet British and Irish history
chaucer@unlinfo.unl.edu literature of the Chaucerian period
to subscribe, mail request to chaucer-request@unlinfo.unl.edu
ansax-l@wvnvm.wvnet.edu Anglo-Saxon period (all subjects)
LIST ARCHIVES
ANSAXDAT is the archive for the ANSAX-L discussion group. It is a
searchable database.
gopher morgan.ucs.mun.ca
--> Libraries and Electronic Publications
--> ANSAXDAT
The archives of the now-defunct list CAMELOT are still available.
They consist of several huge files, and are not searchable in that
form. (hint: you can make them searchable by importing the files
to a word processing program with searching capability.)
ftp sapphire.epcc.ed.ac.uk
/pub/camelot/Archives
filenames include various collections dated 1991-1993
USENET NEWSGROUPS
alt.mythology myths and legends of all times, from all
over the world
rec.arts.sf.misc broad range of topics, from "need roommate
for conference" to "worst sf novel ever"
rec.arts.sf.written science fiction literature
V. AUDIO-VISUAL MEDIA
----------------------
MOVIES
A list of Arthurian movies and television shows.
ftp sapphire.epcc.ed.ac.uk
/pub/camelot/Interesting
filename: filmlist
Cardiff's movie database browser takes its information from the
USENET newsgroup rec.arts.movies. It is searchable by name, title,
or genre.
URL http://www.cm.cf.ac.uk/Movies
Unarguably, one of the best (and most popular) Arthurian movies
ever made is "Monty Python's Holy Grail". The following sites
contain a screenplay from before the filming of the movie, so it
contains some scenes and lines which were cut from the finished
version. It even includes the hilarious opening credits.
(Remember Ralph the Wonder Llama?)
ftp dixie.aiss.uiuc.edu
/pub/cathouse/movies/scripts
filename: monty.python.and.the.holy.grail
gopher oscar.cs.byu.edu
--> Humor
filename: Monty Python's Holy Grail Screen Play
If all you need is a short clip from the script, this site has the
Camelot scene (featuring the song "We're knights of the round
table...") and the Witch Trial scene (in which Sir Bedivere proves
himself as a man of science).
ftp ocf.berkeley.edu
/pub/Library/Monty_Python
filenames: camelot; witch
SOUNDS
The serious Arthurian scholar and computer user will surely want to
program her computer to utter Arthurian phrases. Many sound clips
from the Monty Python movie are available at this site, including
such classics as "bring out your dead!" and "help, help, I'm being
repressed!"
ftp dixie.aiss.uiuc.edu
/pub/cathouse/humor/monty.python/sound
filenames: bringout.au; ni.au; represd.au; and many more
IMAGES
This site contains a futuristic drawing -- an image of Arthur in
shining armor superimposed upon a British astronaut in modern
spacesuit.
ftp ftp.acs.appstate.edu
/pub/images/jpg/cartoons
filename: camelot.jpg
The following site has several photographs (some in both color and
black and white) including one of the chapels at Glastonbury Abbey;
"Arthur's Cross" from the grave at the Abbey; a sword with gleaming
hilt; and the top of Glastonbury Tor.
ftp sapphire.epcc.ed.ac.uk
/pub/camelot/Gifs
filenames: chapel.gif; cross.gif; sword.gif; tor.gif; and others
VI. THE LABYRINTH
------------------
The Labyrinth is an amazing new WWW resource. It is devoted
completely to medieval studies. Because it opened so recently (May
1994) several of its links are still labeled "under construction".
One of the areas currently being developed is the Arthurian Studies
section. However, many of the materials already there are useful to
the Arthurian scholar. The Labyrinth's features include subject menus
(by national cultures or by international culture), indexes,
bibliographies, directories of associations and organizations, and
images from manuscripts and art.
Some items to browse:
Subject Menus
British Isles
Labyrinth On-Line Bibliographies
Index of Medieval Studies Bibliographies (from the University of
Kansas, includes arthur.bib)
Studies in the Age of Chaucer (SAC) Bibliography (the database
at University of Texas, San Antonio)
Medieval Studies Databases and Projects
HNSource: History Database at UKansas (includes the Bryn Mawr
Medieval Review, English Literary Texts, and all sorts of
other Ebook and Ejournal pointers)
Many of the items listed in the preceding sections of this guide are now, or may soon be, accessible through the Labyrinth. It has the potential to be the medievalist's one-stop center.
URL http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/labyrinth-home.html
****************************************************************
* This document may be freely distributed, but please leave my *
* name attached. If you have suggestions for additions to the *
* list, let me know and I'll try to keep it up to date... -AC *
****************************************************************
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