Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Other Final Website News
For my resources page, I am considering adding links to Worldcat or Google Books for the different print texts that I list. Worldcat records would be a good idea since it would allow visitors to find out what library has the materials and it automatically sets up to view the places closest to the IP address of the computer. I could also links to materials in Google Books if there are digitized copies of books I mention.
I considered linking the titles of the books and films to The Internet Movie Database or Amazon.com, but worried that might create too many links on my site and make it a little too busy. Also, these are outside commercial entities, and I do not want to seem like I am encouraging either enterprise.
I considered adding another page to my site, about films and books based on Classicists, like The Human Stain (book and film), The Lake of Dead Languages (book) and The Secret History (book). After careful consideration I decided that having 4 pages was enough to cover the material I was interested in and that a page about Classicists might seem out of place. Also finding source material would be considerably more difficult since they are not written about by reliable scholarly sources.
I have kept working on the text portion of the site and have completed 2 other titles, The Persian Boy and The Penelopiad. I plan to continue working on them doing a few over the next week so that I can focus more on the technical end of this project.
Text Example
The strongest point of the film is probably the fighting style of Achilles, which seems appropriately superhuman. He is the divine son of a goddess and a legendary warrior, and he moves with the graceful ease of someone built for war.
Rating: C+ ; See it for the fighting, ignore everything else.
Resources:
An excellent online translation taken from the a classic translation, includes in text hyperlinks to standard commentaries on the work. All text used is from out of copyright materials.
Homer, Iliad. Translated. by Stanley Lombardo.
This translation is done in colloquial English and is considered the most popular and accessible of the current print translations.
Quintus of
Written in 3rd century C.E., based off of texts we no longer have access to, and thus a valuable resource regarding how the Trojan War ended.
Website Material
300 (film)
Alexander (film)
The Persian Boy (Book)
Caesar (book)
Gladiator (Film)
I, Claudius (BBC Miniseries)
The Penelopiad (book)
Troy (film)
The Alchemist (book)
Cleopatra (film)
The Mummy/The Mummy Returns (film series)
I have begun writing my text based on the following outline:
Summary (few sentence overview)
Evaluation (1-3 points about the film both positive and negative)
Rating (graded scale with one comment)
Resources (which will go on the final resources page for the site).
I would also like to include a few images for each page and have made arrangements to get my travel photos from Egypt and Italy sent from home. I plan to use the scanners at the University of Pennsylvania Library to create images that I can add to my site.
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Similar Websites
Some examples are:
Ancient Rome in Film and Fact (University of Florida)
With my website I hope to include more information about specific films/books rather than a general overview. I am aiming for in depth coverage of a few items rather than comprehensive lists.
Website Challenges
For example, for the page on Greece, I might choose to cover the film 300 (which is known for its extreme violence and visual effects), the book The Persian Boy (a highly respected novel whose author has often been recommended reading in my Classics courses) and Reign (an anime adaptation of the life of Alexander the Great set in the year 3000 A.D. ).
Then after each little summary and review I would want to include links to resources for more information as well as some recommended books. Some websites I might want to include for the different films/books would be:
The Greek Mythology Link
This would be really great for the Troy page since it covers mythology and has a special section on Troy.
The Perseus Digital Library
This library provides both Greek/Latin and English translations of primary works of history and would be great for the history based films/books since I could link to specific texts.
Roman Emperors: The Imperial Index
This website (created by a Classics professor at Penn State) has a lot of information about the different Roman emperors so it would be excellent for the Rome page.