http://www.bowiestate.edu/academics/english/hardymcook.htm
Click on the "Shakespeare on the Internet" link to access an excellent listing of Shakespeare-related sites. 
(They open in frames, but Dr. Cook provides the URL's)  Dr. Cook neglects to supply visitors with links to
any of his original works.  To read his essay entitled "TWO LEAR'S FOR TELEVISION: AN EXPLORATION OF 
TELEVISUAL STRATEGIES"    <click here>

Also visit Dr. Hardy Cook's Shaksper Listserv website at:
http://ws.bowiestate.edu/

http://www.m-w.com/lighter/shak/ShakHome.htm
A listing of words coined by the bard...

http://daphne.palomar.edu/Shakespeare/
Probably the best Shakespeare site on the web. (Terry A. Gray)

http://www.ulen.com/shakespeare/
"Your Shakespeare classroom on the Internet"

http://tech-two.mit.edu/Shakespeare/
The complete works.

http://www.ipl.org/reading/shakespeare/shakespeare.html
The complete works, with a nice interface.

http://www.gh.cs.usyd.edu.au/~matty/Shakespeare/
The complete works, and some good links.

http://www.stratford.co.uk/
Information on Shakespeare's birthplace, the surrounding area, and his works.

http://www.emory.edu/ENGLISH/classes/Shakespeare_Illustrated/Shakespeare.html
"Shakespeare Illustrated, a work in progress, explores nineteenth-century paintings, 
criticism and productions of Shakespeare's plays and their influences on one another."

http://www.jetlink.net/~massij/shakes/
An excellent resource for teaching Shakespeare.

http://www.shakespeare-online.com/
Themes, analysis, bio, etc...

http://www.bardweb.net/
Mostly links but features a good section on Shakespeare's grammar (syntax, rhetoric, etc.)

http://www.folger.edu/Home_02b.html
The online home of the Folger Shakespeare Library - Washington, D.C.

http://www.clark.net/pub/tross/ws/will.html
The Shakespeare Authorship Page.

http://daphne.palomar.edu/Shakespeare/lambtales/LAMBTALE.HTM
Tales from Shakespeare... part of Terry Gray's site.

http://web.uvic.ca/shakespeare/Annex/ShakSites3.html#toc3
An extensive collection of links to primary source material. Many scholarly articles/essays.

http://web.uvic.ca/shakespeare/Annex/ShakSites1.html
An excellent portal site.

http://www.ardenshakespeare.com/
Offers scholarly resources for teaching and reading the Bard's works. Free membership includes essays, discussion boards, and book order forms.

http://web.uvic.ca/shakespeare/
The Internet Shakespeare Editions... Includes various version of Shakepeare's works (folios, edited, etc.) as well as an excellent "Life and Times" section.


Shakespeare and Star Trek

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