Tuesday, 25 November 2014

And can we make a decent open access reading list ?

I recently suggested that it might be able to put together an open access reading list for the classics.


So I did, purely as an experiment. I picked a very random (and very short) list of university classics departments and downloaded their introductory reading lists. Some were fairly short some were more oriented to summer reading (and the suspicion that most students would do little if any). I collated the Exeter, Tufts, Warwick and KCL lists and came up with the following:



Author

Book

Source

Online

Homer

Iliad

KCL, Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Homer

Odyssey

Exeter, Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Sophocles

Oedipus

KCL, Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Sophocles

Antigone

Tufts

Gutenberg

Virgil

Aeneid

KCL, Exeter, Warwick

Adelaide e-books

Tacitus

Annals

KCL, Exeter

Adelaide e-books

Juvenal

Satires

KCL, Warwick

Internet Archive

Plato

Symposium

Exeter, Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Plato

Republic

Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Herodotus

Histories

Exeter, Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Suetonius

Lives of the Caesars

Exeter

Gutenberg

Seneca

Letters from a Stoic

Exeter

Internet archive

Ovid

Metamorphoses

Exeter

Adelaide e-books

Lucian

True History

Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Theocritus

Idylls

Tufts

Gutenberg

Aristotle

Poetics

Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Aristotle

Nichormachean Ethics

Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Longus

Daphne and Chloe

Tufts

Internet Archive

Thucydides

Histories

Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Xenophon

Anabasis

Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Horace

Satires

Warwick

Adelaide e-books

Aristophanes

Clouds

Tufts

Adelaide e-books

Aeschylus

Oresteia

Tufts

Adelaide e-books


In the main I found the texts on the University of Adelaide's ebook sitse. Adelaide E-books (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au) is a paricularly good source of texts and in some cases has alternative translations, as well as links to wikipedia etc. It's not just classical texts, there's a good range of English literature texts as well.


All sites allow downloads in both epub and mobi format meaning that the books can be read on a kindle or on a tablet, including one of the cheap no-name Android tablets that can be picked up for less than a $100, in some cases considerably less.


I've made no attempt to assess the text for accuracy, but what this little paper exercise shows is that it is perfectly possible to create an open access reading list.


While you may argue that having to own a tablet is a barrier to access, most (potential) students already have a suitable device, and with a decent second hand paperback copy of Suetonius's Twelve Caesars costing around $10 with shipping we can argue that even if you have to buy a tablet the exercise is better than cost neutral ...


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