CZ:Literature Workgroup

From Citizendium
Revision as of 13:29, 7 August 2009 by imported>Shamira Gelbman (→‎Writers: Yiddish - Singer, Sholem Aleichem)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Workgroups are no longer used for group communications, but they still are used to group articles into fields of interest. Each article is assigned to 1-3 Workgroups via the article's Metadata.

Literature Workgroup
Literature article All articles (865) To Approve (0) Editors: active (2) / inactive (15)
and
Authors: active (266) / inactive (0)
Workgroup Discussion
Recent changes Citable Articles (2)
Subgroups (4)
Checklist-generated categories:

Subpage categories:

Missing subpage categories:

Article statuses:

The purpose of this Literature Workgroup is to co-ordinate and organise the work on, and improvement of, articles on Literature. If you'd like to join as an Author, please add yourself to Category:Literature Authors, introduce yourself on the Literature Workgroup Forum and start improving articles. If you think you have the expertise to be an Editor, take a look at the instructions on how to become an editor and then add yourself to Category: Literature Editors.

CZ:Core_Articles

What are core articles? Core articles are our top priority articles – articles that are most in demand and most important for us to include in an encyclopedia that has any hope of being comprehensive.

These are the highest priority articles items for the Literature Workgroup, though they have not yet been finalized by a Workgroup editor. In order to keep the list manageable, this list should be contain no more than about 200 items total. Thus only those articles should be added which can reasonably be considered of paramount importance for the Literature WG.

In the listings below, articles (links) rendered in blue are those articles which have at least some substantive content beyond a mere definition. Those articles rendered bold-faced link to lemma articles, which have no content beyond the bare definition only. If the link is rendered magenta, then not even a lemma article has been created. The bar graph to the left of those articles which have substantive content (blue link) indicates the level of completeness of the artilce.

Survey articles

Writers

Ancient writers

Medieval writers

Children's and young adult literature

Science-fiction writers

American writers

English writers

French writers

German writers

Irish writers

Japanese writers

Russian writers

Scottish writers

South African writers

Spanish writers

Yiddish Writers

Unsorted by nationality

Literary genres

Literary motifs, styles, and techniques

Literary movements

Help plan Literature Week!

Go here and sign up!

List of Subsidiary Literature pages