Tips for Using Hamlet Navigator
- Links: Throughout Hamlet Navigator quotations are linked to the text of the play. These links are numerous, so that you can easily move back and forth--using the arrow buttons on your browser--between a summary and the text.
- Copying Text: Hamlet Navigator is protected by copyright, but you can copy anything in the program for legitimate academic purposes. To copy, use the same commands as you use in your word processing program. If you keep a word processing document open, you can easily click over to the document window and paste what you've copied, then click back to Hamlet Navigator.
- Citation: The Columbia Guide to Online Style recommends the following format for "Humanities Style" bibliographic listing of a electronic source:
-
Author's Last Name, First Name.
- "Title of Document." Title of
Complete Work [if applicable].
Version or File Number [if
applicable]. Document date or
date of last revision [if
different from access date].
Protocol and address, access
path or directories
(date of access).
Here's a sample for Hamlet Navigator:
-
Weller, Philip.
- "Summary of Act 1, Scene 1." Hamlet Navigator.
<http://www.clicknotes.com/hamlet/One1.html>
( ).
- The Text: The text of Hamlet that is included in this program is a version of the "Moby" electronic text, which you can find on-line at http://the-tech.mit.edu/Shakespeare/works.html.
- Line Numbers: In the text of Hamlet, the line numbers will correspond very well with the line numbers in modern double-column editions of Shakespeare, such as The Riverside Shakespeare, edited by G. Blakemore Evans, or The Complete Works of Shakespeare, edited by David Bevington, but be sure to check all quotations taken from Hamlet Navigator against a text approved by your instructor or editor.
- The Author: The author of Hamlet Navigator is Philip
Weller, Professor of English at Eastern
Washington University, located in Cheney, Washington, USA.