Links Database:
Keyword women
- A Celebration of Women Writers: 1501 - 1600
- http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/_generate/1501-1600.html
- A Celebration of Women Writers, edited by Mary Mark Ockerbloom, maintains a collection of e-texts of Renaissance women writers:
- keywords: writers, female, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > Authors and Texts > Women writers
- valid as of 2005-09-14
Early Modern Women Database- http://www.lib.umd.edu/ETC/LOCAL/emw/emw.php3
- Early Modern Women Database, maintained by Georgianna Ziegler of the Folger Shakespeare Library, is a comprehensive and informative gateway to women's writing, art, and society:
- keywords: art, bibliography, database, early, modern, library, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > Authors and Texts
- valid as of 2005-09-12
Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender- http://www.haverford.edu/library/reference/mschaus/mfi/mfi.html
- Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender Indexlists scholarship on women, sexuality, and gender:
- keywords: gender, sexuality, medieval, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > History > Women
- valid as of 2005-09-14
- Judith Shakespeare Company
- http://www.judithshakespeare.org/
- New York, New York. Judith Shakespeare Company is a "not-for-profit theatre ensemble dedicated to discovering what lies at the heart of a great play through the exploration of its language." It also looks at women's roles in classical theatre:
- keywords: company, women
- found in: Shakespeare Sites > Theater Companies and Festivals > USA
- valid as of 2005-09-12
- MATEO - editio theodoro-palatina online
- http://www.uni-mannheim.de/mateo/start6.html
- The University of Mannheim, Germany, provides electronic facsimiles of Latin and German texts by Renaissance women. This site is in German:
- keywords: german, facsimiles, latin, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > Authors and Texts > Women writers
- valid as of 2005-09-14
- Renaissance Forum
- http://www.hull.ac.uk/renforum/v1no1/clare.htm
- Clare, Janet.Transgressing Boundaries: Women's Writing in the Renaisscance and Reformation. (University College Dublin). Exerpt:"The writings of women, whether religious, popular, humanist or courtly, had in the mid sixteenth to early seventeenth century at least one common aspect: women writers represented in their work an alternative culture which ran alongside the dominant culture and in writing as some did with a view to publication, they were transgressing boundaries." View the full-text version of this document at:
- keywords: culture, female, forum, reformation, seventeenth, sixteenth, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > Authors and Texts > Women writers
- valid as of 2005-09-14
- Romancing the Bard
- http://www.colby.edu/personal/leosborn/contents.html
- Osborne, Laurie. "Romancing the Bard." Osborne explores the use of Shakespeare and Shakespearean references in that most vilified form of popular culture, the romance novel:
- keywords: bard, culture, women, romance, appropriation
- found in: Shakespeare Sites > Criticism > Individual articles
- valid as of 2005-09-07
- Selected Poetry of Amilia Lanyer (1569-1645)
- http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poet/195.html
- Exerpts fromSalve Deus Rex Iudaeorum(Eve's Apology in Defence of Women) are available atRepresentative Poetry Online:
- keywords: amilia, lanyer, defence, poetry, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > Authors and Texts > Women writers > Lanyer, Aemilia
- valid as of 2005-09-14
- The Perdita Project
- http://human.ntu.ac.uk/perdita/
- The Perdita Project: Early Modern Women's Manuscript Compilations, maintained by Jill Seal Millman of the University of Warwick, is located at:
- keywords: early, modern, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > Authors and Texts > Women writers
- valid as of 2005-09-14
- Women Writers Resource Project
- http://chaucer.library.emory.edu/wwrp/index.html
- TheEmory Women Writers Research Projectis home to a collection of texts by women "writing in English from the seventeenth century through the nineteenth century." Access this collection at:
- keywords: collection, english, seventeenth, women
- found in: Renaissance Sites > Authors and Texts > Women writers
- valid as of 2005-09-14