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UCCP 101 COMMON TEXTS **Faculty will supplement this list with texts of their own choosing.
Most commonly taught supplementary texts include Christine De Pizan, The
Book of the City of Ladies; Thomas Cahill, How the Irish Saved
Civilization; Seamus Heaney, trans. Beowulf; Dante, The
Inferno; The Lais of Marie De France.
Civil Disobedience, by Henry David Thoreau, presents a different perspective. "The Letter from the Birmingham Jail" and other works at Stanford's
Martin Luther King, Jr. Papers Project. Modern Poetry: Read Dudley Randall's poem about the Sixteenth Street Church bombing, "The Ballad of Birmingham." II. Christianity and Medieval Culture Find a variety of medieval texts, bibliographies, and commentaries at Georgetown's Labyrinth: A World Wide Server for Medieval Studies. The Internet Medieval Source Book is extensive, indexed, has links to on-line manuscripts, full-text resources, newly translated texts, and for Saints fans a special section, Saints' Lives. Selections by Augustine of Hippo: Augustine's complete works as well as those of his contemporaries and predecessors are available at the New Advent. A modern translation of the Confessions is available as part of Fordham University's Medieval Source Book. Chaucer's MetaPage at University of North Carolina. For a summary of any religion go to The Religious Movements Page. Ancillary Materials See what a first edition Dante manuscript looked like at a site produced by the University of Notre Dame, the University of Chicago and the Newberry Library. For a taste of French love poems from the Late Middle Ages, sample these excerpts from Ronsard. III. The Renaissance
See the details of Renaissance and Baroque architecture at the University of Virginia's Digital Image Center. The Library of Congress's Vatican Exhibit traces the impact of the Renaissance on Rome. IV. Exploration and Encounter Visit the Internet Public Library's Shakespeare Bookshelf. V. Middle East and Islam
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| Last updated: August 4, 2006 . Maintained by Susan Murphy. |