Welcome to the Home Page
ofAn Electronic Journal for the Exchange of Information on Current Research, Publications and Productions concerning Oscar Wilde and His Worlds On this page you will find the links to all our current and archived
issues and to our Appendices.
These will become live as they are transferred from our former site to
this one. We recommend that you
join our discussion forum, where announcements will also be posted between
issues of the journal. To reach its simple registration form, please click To return to the hub page with links to all the journals in the
group, please click For our Guidelines for Submissions, please click here.
Archived Issues All our editions are listed and linked. Click here.
Each issue has its own Table of Contents, and we are compiling Tables of Contents for the entire Journal as an easy way of navigating through THE OSCHOLARS thematically. These are listed in the Appendices and can be found by clicking
Nothing in THE OSCHOLARS© is copyright to the Journal (though it may be to individual contributors) unless indicated by ©, and the usual etiquette of attribution will doubtless be observed. Please feel free to re-format it, print it, store it electronically whole or in part, copy and paste parts of it, and (of course) recommend or forward it to colleagues THE
OSCHOLARS was made possible by the Jim O'Beirne Memorial Bursary
From October 2003 circumstances made
suspension of publication necessary.
In January 2006 the task was undertaken of re-transcribing all issues
for publication at www.irishdiaspora.net
(courtesy of Mr Patrick O’Sullivan).
This was completed in October 2006 and new editions were issued on
that site in October 2006, December 2006 and January 2007. Changes in the way that the server
was managed brought forward the need to re-establish THE OSCHOLARS and its
off-shoots on its own site, and with the very substantial help of Mr Steven
Halliwell of The Rivendale Press,
work began on the creation of www.oscholars.com
in February 2007. Without the generosity of Mr
O’Sullivan, it is probable that THE OSCHOLARS would never have been revived;
without that of Mr Halliwell, that it would never have been able to develop
into a fully functional website.
20th March 2007 |