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I would also add the Early Modern Literary Studies online journal:

http://extra.shu.ac.uk/emls/emlshome.html

Thanks for collating this list, Brad.
Sean.



On Wed, May 14, 2014 at 12:10 PM, Andrew Strycharski <[log in to unmask]>wrote:

> Update to Brad's list:
>
> The Sidney Society's official web site is now www.SidneySociety.org
>
> -Andy
>
>
> On 5/14/2014 2:45 PM, Tuggle, Brad wrote:
>
>> Dear List,
>>       I have been asked to share my very unscientific and incomplete
>> compilation of websites for the likes of us. This what I have so far:
>>
>> I. The Obvious:
>>
>> Spenser Online (http://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/)
>> Sidney Society Online (http://www.english.cam.ac.uk/sidney/society.htm)
>> Sidney Society Twitter (@SidneySociety) (https://twitter.com/
>> SidneySociety)
>>
>>
>> II. Institutes and Journals:
>>
>> The Collation (The Folger’s blog)  (collation.folger.edu)
>> -- shares images of all kinds of treasures from The Folger's collection,
>> with an understandable focus on bibliography and book-making; plus, they
>> run a fun series of bibliographic mysteries called "What manner o' thing is
>> your crocodile?"
>>
>> Iter Announcements Service (www.itergateway.org/announcements)
>> -- exactlywhat the title implies: just a basic list of the newest Iter
>> book releases and awards, though the main Iter site is a          more
>> expansive "gateway to the Middle Ages and Renaissance"
>>
>> Early Modern Online Bibliography (earlymodernonlinebib.wordpress.com)
>> -- "This weblog was created by Anna Battigelli (SUNY Plattsburgh) and
>> Eleanor Shevlin (West Chester University of Pennsylvania) to facilitate
>> scholarly feedback and discussion pertaining to valuable online text-bases
>> for the humanities, such as EEBO, ECCO, and the Burney Collection.  Of
>> particular interest are bibliographical problems encountered while using
>> these text-bases. Also of interest are the consequences new digital tools
>> present for the humanities,specifically their impact on teaching and
>> research in the field of early modern studies"
>>
>> Journal of the Northern Renaissance (www.northernrenaissance.org)
>> -- "a peer-reviewed, open-access online journal dedicated to the study of
>> both the cultural productions and the concept of the Northern Renaissance."
>>
>> Upstart: A Journal of English Renaissance Studies (
>> http://www.clemson.edu/upstart/index.html)
>>
>> The Appendix (http://theappendix.net/blog)
>> "The Appendix is a quarterly journal of experimental and narrative
>> history; though at times outlandish, everything in its pages is as true as
>> the sources allow. The Appendix solicits articles from historians, writers,
>> and artists committed to good storytelling, with an eye for the strange and
>> a suspicion of both jargon and traditional narratives. A creature of the
>> web, its format takes advantage of the flexibility of hypertext and modern
>> web presentation techniques to experiment with and explore the process and
>> method of writing history."
>>
>>
>> III. Personal Blogs:
>>
>> Shakespearean Exteriority -- Kevin Curran (shakespeareanexteriority.
>> wordpress.com)
>>
>> Tudor Stuff -- Andrew Walsh (tudorstuff.wordpress.com)
>>
>> Wine Dark Sea -- Michael Witmore (winedarksea.org)
>>
>> Old Men Explore (http://rogerkuin.blogspot.com/)
>> -- merges an exquisite Renaissance sensibility with finely crafted prose,
>> all infused with personal religious meditation -- simply beautiful
>>
>>
>> IV. Miscellaneous
>>
>> Six Degrees of Francis Bacon (sixdegreesoffrancisbacon.com)
>> -- podcasts, essays, and beautiful graphs of early modern social
>> networks, including networks of letter writers; is open to quantititave and
>> high-tech analysis of early modern stuff
>>
>> the Zeugmatic (zeugmatic.org)
>> -- MichaelUllyot's project seeking "to automate the detection of
>> rhetorical figures, or the patterns of repetition and variation that make
>> language — especially poetic language — memorable and effective."
>>
>> Yours,
>> Brad
>>
>
> --
> Andrew Strycharski
> Instructor, English Department
> Florida International University
>



-- 
-------------------------------------------------
Sean Henry, B.A., M.A., PhD.
Lecturer, Department of English
University of Victoria, B.C., Canada
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