Humanities
Computing Last Updated: November 26, 1996 [Suggestion Box]
CETH:
Centre for Electronic Texts in the Humanties The Center for Electronic Texts in the
Humanities (CETH) was established by Rutgers and
Princeton Universities in 1991 to provide a
national focus for those involved in creating,
disseminating and using electronic texts in the
humanities.
Electronic
Archives for Teaching the American Literatures The Electronic Archives contain essays,
syllabi, bibliographies, and other resources for
teaching the multiple literatures of the United
States. The Archives are designed as a
complementary resource to the electronic
discussion list, T-AMLIT.
The Electronic Archives are created and
maintained by the Center for Electronic Projects
in American Culture Studies (CEPACS)
at Georgetown University's American Studies
Program. The Archives are sponsored by Georgetown
University and the D.C. Heath Publishing Company.
The
Orlando Project: This project's primary
objective is to produce, in printed and
electronic forms, the first full scholarly
history of women's writing in the British Isles.
SGML
Web Page Here you will find many links to SGML
resources on the net. SGML (Standard Generalized
Markup Language) is fast becoming the encoding
standard for electronic texts.
SuperCAL:
Interactive Computer Aided Learning for the
Internet SuperCAL is our name for Interactive Computer
Aided Learning materials designed for the
Internet. This unfunded project attempts to
present all that is needed to create or run
SuperCAL applications, except for the commercial
authoring tools.
TACTWeb
Home Page An interesting peak at how TACT and the Web
can be combined into useful teaching and research
tool in the humanities.