The Home Page Tod E. Jones Greetings visitors, and welcome to my home page! The table of contents below will lead you to sites that either tell you directly about me or reflect my work and interests. I am a Victorianist with a particular interest in the history and theology of the Christian Church in England. What There Is to See at This Web Site Curriculum Vitae (: a documentation of some of my accomplishments and experience, with links to selected course syllabi) Matthew Arnold and the Jesus Seminar (: an essay written for oral presentation at a conference) Victorian Poems of Faith and Doubt (: a selection from Tennyson, C. Rossetti, Arnold, Clough, Fitzgerald, Swinburne, and Hardy) How to Excell in an Undergraduate Literature Course MLA Style and Documentation (: guidelines and examples to current MLA procedures for writers of research papers) English Grammar and Punctuation (: guidelines to identifying and correcting common errors in writing) Links to Favorite Sites Karen and Tod's Family Page (This site is designed and managed by my wife, Karen.) English Literature and Religion: A Bibliography in Progess (This site is produced by Professor William S. Peterson of the University of Maryland at College Park, who served as the chair of my doctoral dissertation.) The Victorian Web (Produced by George P. Landow, Professor of English and Art History at Brown University, this site offers an excellent overview of Religion in Victorian Britain.) Victoria Research Web (This site, created by Professor Patrick Leary of Indiana University, offers links to research resources pertinent to Victorian studies.) Voice of the Shuttle: English Literature: Victorian (This is a site for research in the humanities, produced by Alan Liu, Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara.) British and Irish Authors on the Web (For researching UK authors from ca. 600 to the present, Mitsuharu Matsuoka, Assoc. Professor at Nagoya University, has gathered thousands of links.) Sonnet Central (Created by Eric Blomquist, this site includes a link to The Victorian Sonnet.)
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