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Navigating the Table of Contents
Literary Theory: Table of Contents

Literary Theory: Table of Contents

From the Table of Contents page, you can use the Page Toolbar to open a context-sensitive Help page or to refine your original search.

From every page in Literary Theory you can use the Right-Hand Toolbar to consult general information about Literary Theory, to start a new search, to access the top-level Table of Contents page and to switch between components of Individual Literature Collections.

There are two ways to access the Table of Contents page. You can:

Right-Hand Toolbar Table of Contents iconclick the Table of Contents icon from the Right-Hand Toolbar on any page. This will take you to the top-level Table of Contents page arranged as an alphabetical list of authors. You can select an author to download a list of works written by that particular author.
Page Toolbar Table of Contents iconclick the Context icon on the Page Toolbar of the Full text page. This will take you directly to the Table of Contents page, expanded to the level of the Full text entry.

The Table of Contents page allows you to browse through the authors whose works are included in Literary Theory and look at their structure. For example, you may wish to view a list of the works of a particular author, or look at the original context of the work you are currently viewing.

The various levels of heading are represented in the Table of Contents by branches which can be expanded or collapsed. Navigation within the Table of Contents is by means of the icons and collapse icon which indicate whether you can expand or collapse a branch to change the level of detail displayed.

Each of the branches in the Table of Contents is hyperlinked to the Full text of the corresponding item. The title of each item is followed by the download size in bytes of the corresponding Full text page. The larger the download size of an item, the longer the Full text page will take to download.

The order of the Table of Contents is the same as the Full text; alphabetically by name of author, then alphabetically by title of work. The contents of the works themselves follow their copy texts in structure and order so that headings and divisions within the copy text are preserved.


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(Literary Theory version 00:1)