Autumn Term CORE MODULES. Fifth-century Athens (20 credits)

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Autumn Term CORE MODULES. Fifth-century Athens (20 credits)"

Transcription

1

2 CORE MODULES Fifth-century Athens (20 credits) CL1CA Autumn Term Professor Amy Smith The course concentrates on Athens in the fifth century BC, providing an introduction to Greek history and culture for those continuing with Ancient History and Classical Studies, as well as for others. Although lectures provide an outline of the century's history, their structure is primarily thematic, addressing topics such as democracy, Athenian attitudes to outsiders and barbarians, drama, art, gender and sexuality, philosophy, and medicine. The topics are pursued further in seminars which focus on a selection of relevant ancient texts and images. The course represents current thinking and research on the various subjects covered, introducing even those students with prior experience of classical studies to new areas and methods. At the same time no specific knowledge is assumed as a prerequisite for this preliminary module. Ancient Song (20 credits) CL1SO Dr Gill Knight The course covers provides an introduction to ancient song, considering the major themes attendant on the study of lyric (oral performance/written text personal /public; social context; music and rhythm; sources) and looks at some of the principal authors in Greek and Latin: Alcman, Tyrtaeus, Sappho, Alcaeus, Stesichorus, Simonides, Bacchylides, Pindar, Catullus, Horace, and the Hadrianic poets. This material is covered in broad chronological order in lectures, with seminars to reinforce and develop this material with a selection of relevant ancient texts and related sources. The course represents current thinking and research on the various subjects covered, introducing even those students with prior experience of classical studies to new areas and methods. No specific knowledge is expected as a prerequisite for this module, but readiness to do significant preparatory reading is assumed.

3 Spring Term Rome in the Augustan Age (20 credits) CL1CB Professor Annalisa Marzano The course examines different aspects of the history and culture of Augustan Rome, from imperialism and propaganda to art and literature. Augustus's regime itself provides a focal point for the diverse material considered, so that all the topics are clearly located in their historical context, and the module is a required introductory course for those continuing with Ancient History as well as Classical Studies. Lectures provide an outline of the events of the period as well as their Roman Republican background. Their structure, however, is primarily thematic, addressing topics such as war and civil war, slavery, propaganda, Virgil's Aeneid, the Roman live poets, and Augustan art and architecture. The topics are pursued further in seminars which focus on a selection of relevant ancient texts and images. The course represents current thinking and research on the various subjects covered, introducing even those students with prior experience of classical studies to new areas and methods. At the same time no specific knowledge is assumed as a prerequisite for this preliminary module. Texts, Readers and Writers (20 credits) CL1TR Dr Emma Aston This module explores the history of text, reading, and writing in the Greek and Roman worlds, the development of literature and literary criticism, and its relationship of reading and writing to material culture. No knowledge of Latin or Ancient Greek is required. Topics studied may include the production and circulation of texts in the ancient world; orality and rhetoric; Linear B; the Greek alphabet; material texts including coins and inscriptions; literary genres in the ancient world; ancient scholarship; Greek and Roman cultures of reading and performance; the transmission, translation and reception of Greek and Roman texts.

4 CORE MODULES Ancient Epic (20 credits) CL2AE Autumn Term Ms Niki Karapanagioti Works to be studied may include the works of Homer and Virgil. Other possible topics are: the Near Eastern epic of Gilgamesh, the Epic Cycle and Homeric Hymns; the poetry of Hesiod, the Argonautica of Apollonius and Latin epyllion. The lectures will discuss some fundamental issues that affect the interpretation of ancient hexameter poetry, such as authorship, the nature and context of performance, intertextuality and cultural borrowing. Topics discussed may include, for example, heroic values, the role of the supernatural and the divine, the relationship between epic and the expression of Greek or Roman identity, the political dimension of Latin epic, and the reception of Classical epic in later cultures. Greek History: Archaic Age to Alexander (20 credits) CL2GH Professor Timothy Duff This module comprises a historical narrative, whose key elements may include the development of the city state, Archaic Athens, Archaic and Classical Sparta, the Persian Wars, the Peloponnesian War and the Athenian Empire, Athenian Democracy, the ascendancy of Thebes, the rise of Macedonia and the conquests of Alexander. Other possible topics of study are Greek politics and economics, cultural changes, inscriptions, and historiography. Themes and Issues in History (20 credits) CL2TIH Professor Barbara Goff This module aims to provide an understanding, through analysis of wide-ranging examples, of historiography and how historical debate has progressed, and historical methodologies. Students will be expected to attend a course of lectures, organised around the topics of historiography and methodology, and given by historians who are active researchers. Armed with this foundation, and supported by relevant bibliographies and a dedicated website with links to selected source material and secondary literature, they will complete a piece of coursework independently. They will be supported in selecting and analysing relevant material, which will include both key debates amongst historians and the evidence drawn upon in those debates.

5 OPTIONAL MODULES Egypt & Greece Hellenic Origins (10 credits) CL2EY1 Professor Ian Rutherford A module examining relationships between Ancient Greece and Ancient Egypt. Aims: to gain an understanding of the evolution of Egyptian culture in the Late to Ptolemaic periods. to explore the Greeks ambivalent relationship with Egyptians and their culture; to study cases of interaction between Greek and Egyptian literature be it cultic texts or stories. Assessable learning outcomes: By the end of the module it is expected that the student will: be able to identify and describe the range of sources that may be employed to study cultural interaction between Egypt and Greece from the Late to Ptolemaic periods; be able to discuss the key stereotypes pertaining to Egyptians found in Greek literature; be able to evaluate the impact of Greek culture upon Egypt during the Ptolemaic period. Greek Comedy (10 credits) CL2GC Dr David Carter The module provides a detailed study of Greek comedy, and of important themes in scholarship. The module traces the origins of Attic old comedy and its development into new comedy in the fourth century BC. Detailed reference will be made to specific plays. By the end of the module it is expected that students will be able to: show detailed knowledge and appreciation of some of the surviving plays demonstrate a critical awareness of the development of the genre have some command of important trends in modern scholarship on the subject complement the evidence and arguments presented in the lectures with additional information assembled by their own research articulate their arguments effectively and illustrate them with relevant evidence My Mother s Sins and other Stories (10 credits) CL2MSI Dr Dimitra Tzanidaki Since its emergence in 1821 the Modern Greek State has had a dramatic history with rapid political, economic and social change but also an unprecedented output of creative literature of all kinds. This course introduces the work of some of the most important Greek writers since the late 19th century. Greek novelists and poets exploiting Greek language and culture in all their age-long richness as well as being often influenced by other European literary movements have, in these last two centuries, created a national literature which has, through translation, gained its

6 distinct place in a European and global context. The course begins with the collected stories of Vizyinos. A survey of Cavafy's collected poems follows as well as some selected poems from the 1930s generation (Seferis' Mythistorima, Ritsos' Moonlight Sonata, some poems from the large oeuvre of Elytis). CORE MODULES Ancient Drama (20 credits) CL2DR Spring Term Professor Barbara Goff Topics covered in this module may include the ritual and political context of ancient drama, the relationship between drama and the epic and lyric tradition, and the use of Greek models by writers of Latin tragedy. Ancient dramas to be discussed will be drawn from the works of such authors as Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Seneca, Plautus and Terence. The interpretation of different plays is used to highlight different methodological approaches to the texts. Ancient Persuasion (20 credits) CL2PE Dr Gill Knight This module has at its heart works of rhetoric such as the epideictic speeches of Gorgias and the legal and political speeches of Demosthenes and Cicero; however, it also assesses the role of persuasion in ancient literature more widely, as well as examining what the ancients themselves thought and said about the power of language to move audiences and to affect decision-making processes. Roman History: From Republic to Empire (20 credits) CL2RO Professor Annalisa Marzano This module treats key historical phases of Roman history spanning from the late 1st c. BC to the late 2nd c. AD. Topics examined will include political, social, cultural and economic history, such as the social structure, the political relationship between emperor and senate, the aims of the building programmes promoted by emperors in the capital and across the empire, the role of the army in the Romanization process. Throughout, the emphasis will be on the historiography of the period and close reading of key primary sources, so that students are encouraged to acquire the skills central to the study of antiquity.

7 OPTIONAL MODULES Ancient World on Film (10 credits) CL2AF Dr Kim Shahabudin This module aims to introduce students to a selection of the ways the ancient world has been represented in cinema and to the techniques and contextual knowledge essential for the study of such films. Following an introduction to issues in the study of cineantiquity, we will consider how these work in practice in a selection of films representing three key narratives from antiquity: Cleopatra, Hercules and the Persian Wars. Seminars will facilitate more interactive discussion of theoretical frameworks, specific films, and their reception as re-presentations of the ancient world. Egypt & Greece: Roman Revelations (10 credits) CL2EY2 A module examining Roman Egypt. Aims: Professor Ian Rutherford to gain an understanding of the evolution of Egyptian culture during the Roman period and Late Antiquity; to explore the Greeks (and Romans ) ambivalent relationship with Egyptians and their culture; to study cases of interaction between Graeco-Roman and Egyptian literature be it cultic texts or stories; to follow the evolution of Egyptian culture beyond the Roman period and assess how modern views in the West are descended from ancient ones. Assessable learning outcomes: By the end of the module it is expected that students will: be able to identify and describe the range of sources that may be employed to study cultural interaction between Egypt and Greece between the Roman period and Late Antiquity; be able to discuss the key stereotypes pertaining to Egyptians found in Greek (and Latin) literature and observe how these stereotypes evolved from the Roman period onwards; be able to evaluate the impact of Greek culture upon Egypt during the Roman period onwards; display awareness of the influence of ancient stereotypes upon the modern era. Roman Love Poetry (10 credits) CL2LV Dr Gill Knight This module aims to introduce students to the dominant themes and concerns of Roman love poetry with a view to establishing its norms and tracing its development over the course of the first century BC. The module will study the love poetry of Catullus, Propertius, Tibullus and Ovid.

8 Sexuality and Gender in the Ancient World (10 credits) CL2SG Professor Barbara Goff This module examines ancient constructions of sexuality and gender and introduces students to modern controversies surrounding them. Lecture and discussion of key ancient texts such as Hesiod, lyric poetry, courtroom speeches, comedy, Latin love poetry, satire, the ancient novel, and visual sources such as statues, vases, and wall paintings. Summer Term Preparation for Dissertation in Classics (10 credits) CL3DP Ms Niki Karapanagioti Students will prepare for their dissertation by completing a series of workshops and an assessed proposal, which will include an annotated bibliography. Students will attend a series of workshops on research skills, and will submit a dissertation proposal of 500 words, and an annotated bibliography of 5-10 items, by the end of the summer term preceding Part 3.

9 Autumn Term Anatolia & The Aegean (20 credits) CL3AA Professor Ian Rutherford The sessions will cover the material culture by culture (Anatolia, Minoan, Mycenaean), culminating in the issues of the Trojan War, and the end of the Bronze Age. By the end of the module it is expected that the student will be able to: Understand the history and the political and religious structures of the culture Aegean and Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age Appraise critically the sources and interpretations of these cultures; Locate and assess the secondary literature relevant to these civilisations Assess the issue of the historicity of the later Greek traditions about the Late Bronze Age Alexander to Cleopatra: History & Culture of the Hellenistic World (20 credits) CL3HW Dr Rachel Mairs This module aims to allow students to gain an understanding of the history of the Hellenistic eastern Mediterranean, from Alexander s conquests, to the rise of Rome and to explore questions of cultural interaction and ethnic identity in the Hellenistic world. Independent Third Year Project (20 credits) CL3IP Ms Niki Karapanagioti An alternative to the traditional dissertation, which is geared to developing the skills of students with a learning disability. Digital Silchester (runs over two terms Autumn and Spring) (20 credits) CL3SIL Dr Matthew Nicholls This module aims to give students an understanding of the history and archaeology of the Roman town of Silchester. By the end of the module it is expected that the student will be able to understand the layout of Silchester, its development over time, the appearance and function of its principal buildings, and the means of creating digital reconstructions of at least some of these, marshalling the various sorts of available evidence and coming up with credible and useful digital content.

10 Technology in the Ancient World (20 credits) CL3TE Professor Annalisa Marzano This module will examine the nature of ancient technological knowledge and the practical applications which affected everyday life. Examples span from technology applied to food production to ensuring an effective water delivery system for Roman baths. The module will be organized thematically; discussion of the Hellenistic period and the studies carried out at the Museum of Alexandria will be important, although not all the discoveries (such as steam power) found practical applications in antiquity. One of the challenges of this topic is that it requires the combination of literary sources (which are not really systematic on this topic) with the study of archaeological finds and the results of the analysis of the archaeological sciences. Topics of study will include mining technology, pottery production, engineering, and modes of transmission of technical knowledge. Transformations of Helen (20 credits) CL3TH Professor Barbara Goff This module aims to familiarise students with different versions of Helen of Troy and to examine some of the literary and theoretical debates that this figure has generated. Participants on the module will read excerpts from a variety of texts which investigate the figure of Helen of Troy. Texts will include Homer, tragedy, philosophy, Vergil, Ovid, and modern plays and poems. Spring Term Ancient Biography (20 credits) CL3AB Professor Timothy Duff This module aims to introduce students to the genres of ancient biographical writing from its beginnings to its developed form as seen in Plutarch, and to teach students to evaluate biographical texts relating to Pericles, Alcibiades, Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar. Greek Art & Drama (20 credits) CL3AD Professor Amy Smith This module comprises a survey of the stories (mostly myths) encountered in Greek drama and the variety of ways in which they have been presented through tragedy, comedy, and visual arts. The presentation of these stories as tragedies is but one stage in the long evolution of ancient myth. In the heydey of Athenian drama (the mid-fifth century B.C.) a number of authors competed with each other in presenting their own individual treatments of the same age-old myths at dramatic festivals. Many of these stories were also popular themes treated in the visual arts, particularly painted pots (in Archaic and Classical Athens and Corinth, as well as South Italy) and mosaics and paintings in the Hellenistic and Roman worlds. The material is surveyed thematically, and will focus on a core group of stories that illustrate a range of Greek ideas. Particular

11 attention will be given to questions concerning how and why visual and literary representations of the same stories differed. How did artists alter the stories in response to the medium in which they worked? To what degree did artists in different media respond to treatments in other media? And how did representations in each medium reflect attitudes and concerns of Classical society? Non-Athenian sources for Athenian dramatic presentations will also be considered, with a view to understanding how artists presented stories differently in a variety of media and for different audiences. Xenophon s Anabasis (20 credits) CL3ANX Emma Aston In his Anabasis, the Classical author Xenophon describes the tortuous journey of a group of Greek mercenaries, periodically unemployed and often at risk of extermination, from Asia Minor to Babylonia and back again via Armenia and the Black Sea. This module will examine the literary and historical significance of this work, and its contribution to our understanding of a neglected aspect of ancient life: that of travel beyond the traditional confines of the city-state. This module aims to give participants a really detailed knowledge of a single ancient text. The work will be studied both as a piece of literature and as evidence for a range of ancient events, customs and attitudes: it will therefore allow students to explore the interface between history and historiography. Carthage The Rise and Fall (20 credits) CL3CTH Dr Gillian MacDonald This module studies the history and archaeology of the city of Carthage from its Phoenician foundation in the 9th century BCE through to the end of Punic Carthage in 146 BCE. Current areas of research related to Punic Carthage including the rise of the Phoenicians in the Western Mediterranean, comparative colonization between Greeks and Phoenicians, Punic identity, the rise of a Carthaginian Empire, and the conflict and contact between Carthage and Rome will be studied. Dissertation (30 credits) CL3DN Ms Niki Karapanagioti This dissertation should allow for in-depth research, explication, and documentation of a topic. Its result should be a piece of original research or, possibly, an original artistic production. Students write one dissertation of no more than 10,000 words, give one oral presentation of no more than 10 minutes, followed by questions, and attend a 15- minute viva voce examination on a draft of their work. Workshops are provided, which address the development of the topic, finding research materials, and skills of oral and written presentation.

12 Additionally Archaeology & Topography of Ancient Greece (20 credits) CL3BSA Professor Timothy Duff This module is offered in conjunction with the British School at Athens. It is open only to those who have secured a place on the summer school by separate application to the appropriate British School (see web for details and deadlines). This module consists of an intensive introduction to Prehistoric, Classical, Roman, and Byzantine Greece, with specialist lectures, guided site visits (often by those responsible for site excavation) and opportunities to gain first-hand experience of objects and monuments not accessible to the individual traveller, and to undertake projects of own (approved) choice. British School at Rome. Undergraduates Summer School (20 credits) CL3BSR Dr Matthew Nicholls This module is offered in conjunction with the British School at Rome. It is open only to those who have secured a place on the summer school by separate application to the appropriate British School (see web for details and deadlines) This module consists of the BSR s undergraduate summer school, currently taught in Rome by Dr Robert Coates-Stevens. The residential course provides an intensive introduction to the topography, archaeology, architecture, and ancient history of Rome. It includes a programme of guided site visits (often by those responsible for site excavation) and opportunities to gain first-hand experience of objects and monuments not accessible to the individual traveller, and to undertake written projects of the student s own (approved) choice.

13 The Language Modules run over two terms - Autumn and Spring Ancient Greek 1 (20 credits) CL1G1 Ms Niki Karapanagioti This module is designed for those at any level (C I or H) who have not learned any Ancient Greek previously. It assumes no knowledge of the language. This module aims to teach students some elements of the Ancient Greek language and give them skills to read Ancient Greek at an elementary level. The course will proceed by instruction in grammar and practice in translation. The text used may be Reading Greek or Athenaze. We aim to cover 1-8 of Reading Greek or 1-12 of Athenaze. Latin 1 (20 credits) CL1L1 Ms Jackie Baines This module is designed for those students, at any level (C, I or H) who not studied Latin previously. It assumes no knowledge of Latin This module aims to teach students some elements of the Latin language and give them skills to read Latin at an elementary level. The course will proceed by instruction in grammar and practice in translation The text used is Reading Latin (P. Jones and K. Sidwell, CUP). We aim to cover 1A-3D. Ancient Greek 2 (20 credits) CL2G2 Dr Luke Houghton This module is designed for those students, at any level (C, I or H) who enter with GCSE Ancient Greek or equivalent, or who have completed Ancient Greek 1 or equivalent The module aims to introduce students to reading Ancient Greek authors in the original, and to develop further knowledge of grammar, syntax and vocabulary. In addition, students will gain practice in the analysis of the literary texts studied. The module is conducted in seminars encouraging participation by students in translation and discussion. The first term will be devoted to completing study of grammar and syntax, and in the second term texts read may include a simple Attic or koine prose text eg Xenophon, Chariton, Apollodorus or selections from the JACT Greek Anthology. At least one hour per week will be devoted to review of grammar and syntax.

14 Ancient Greek 3 (20 credits) CL2G3 Professor Ian Rutherford This module is designed for those students at any level (C I or H) who enter with A level Ancient Greek or equivalent, or who have completed Ancient Greek 2 or equivalent. The module aims to enable students to read Ancient Greek authors with some fluency, and to develop a sound competence in grammar, syntax and vocabulary. In addition, students will gain practice in the analysis of the literary texts studied. Latin 2 (20 credits) CL2L2 Ms Jackie Baines This module is designed for those students, at any level (C, I or H) who enter with GCSE Latin or equivalent, or who have completed Latin 1 or equivalent. The module aims to introduce students to reading Latin authors in the original, and to develop further knowledge of grammar, syntax and vocabulary. In addition, students will gain practice in the analysis of the literary texts studied. The module is conducted in seminars encouraging participation by students in translation and discussion. The first term will be devoted to completing study of grammar and syntax, and in the second term texts read may include selections from Pliny's letters, Caesar or Catullus. At least one hour per week will be devoted to review of grammar and syntax. Latin 3 (20 credits) CL2L3 Dr Katherine Harloe This module is designed for those students at any level (C, I or H) who enter with A level Latin or equivalent, or have completed Latin 2 or equivalent. The module aims to enable students to read Latin authors with some fluency, and to develop a sound competence in grammar, syntax and vocabulary. In addition, students will gain practice in the analysis of the literary texts studied. Latin 4 (20 credits) CL3L4 Dr Gill Knight This module is designed for those students at any level (C, I or H) who have completed Latin 3 or equivalent. The module aims to enable students to improve their skills in a range of Latin authors with greater fluency, and to develop advanced knowledge of grammar, syntax and vocabulary. In addition, students will gain practice in the analysis of the literary texts studied. Students will also practise unseen translation. Texts read may include Petronius, Terence, Horace and Martial. Latin 5 (20 credits) CL3L5 Dr Gill Knight This module is designed for those students at any level (C, I or H) who have completed Latin 4 or equivalent. The module aims to enable students to improve their skills in reading a range of Latin authors with fluency, and to develop appreciation of literary style. In addition, students will gain practice in the analysis of the literary texts studied. Students will also practise unseen translation. Texts read may include Tacitus, Juvenal and Apuleius.

15

Autumn Term CORE MODULES. Ancient Epic (20 credits)

Autumn Term CORE MODULES. Ancient Epic (20 credits) CORE MODULES Ancient Epic (20 credits) CL2AE Autumn Term Dr Katherine Harloe Works to be studied may include the works of Homer and Virgil. Other possible topics are: the Near Eastern epic of Gilgamesh,

More information

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS http://www.uvm.edu/~classics/ Classics, the study of Greek and Roman civilization in the broadest sense, is the original and quintessential liberal arts degree. The field is inherently multidisciplinary

More information

PROFESSORS: George Fredric Franko (chair, philosophy & classics), Christina Salowey

PROFESSORS: George Fredric Franko (chair, philosophy & classics), Christina Salowey Classical Studies MAJOR, MINORS PROFESSORS: George Fredric (chair, philosophy & classics), Christina Classical studies is the multidisciplinary study of the language, literature, art, and history of ancient

More information

DEPARTMENT OF ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES. I. ARCHAEOLOGY: AR_H_A COURSES CHANGE TO AMS (pp. 1 4)

DEPARTMENT OF ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES. I. ARCHAEOLOGY: AR_H_A COURSES CHANGE TO AMS (pp. 1 4) DEPARTMENT OF ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES REVISED CURRICULUM DESIGNATORS (3.5.2018) I. ARCHAEOLOGY: AR_H_A COURSES WILL CHANGE TO AMS (pp. 1 4) II. CLASSICAL HUMANITIES: CL_HUM COURSES ALL CHANGE TO

More information

College of Arts and Sciences

College of Arts and Sciences COURSES IN CULTURE AND CIVILIZATION (No knowledge of Greek or Latin expected.) 100 ANCIENT STORIES IN MODERN FILMS. (3) This course will view a number of modern films and set them alongside ancient literary

More information

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2019

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2019 CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2019 CLAR 051H First Year Seminar: Who Owns the Past? Archaeology is all about the past, but it is embedded in the politics and realities of the present

More information

Classical Studies Courses-1

Classical Studies Courses-1 Classical Studies Courses-1 CLS 108/Late Antiquity (same as HIS 108) Tracing the breakdown of Mediterranean unity and the emergence of the multicultural-religious world of the 5 th to 10 th centuries as

More information

CLASSICAL STUDIES COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

CLASSICAL STUDIES COURSE DESCRIPTIONS CLASSICAL STUDIES COURSE DESCRIPTIONS CLAS 130: CLASSICAL GREEK LITERATURE (4) Reading and discussion of outstanding works in translation from Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic Greece, including selections

More information

Classical civilisation. GCSE subject content

Classical civilisation. GCSE subject content Classical civilisation GCSE subject content February 2016 Contents The content for GCSE classical civilisation 3 Introduction 3 Aims and objectives 3 Subject content 3 Source material and scope of study

More information

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS Department of Classics 1 DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS Contact Information Department of Classics Visit Program Website (http://classics.unc.edu) 212 Murphey Hall, CB# 3145 (919) 962-7191 James B. Rives, Chair

More information

General Bibliographical Resources p. 1 Research Guides p. 1 General Bibliographies p. 5 Bibliographies of Dissertations p. 12 Bibliographies of

General Bibliographical Resources p. 1 Research Guides p. 1 General Bibliographies p. 5 Bibliographies of Dissertations p. 12 Bibliographies of Preface p. xvii General Bibliographical Resources p. 1 Research Guides p. 1 General Bibliographies p. 5 Bibliographies of Dissertations p. 12 Bibliographies of Translations p. 14 Bibliographical Abbreviations

More information

CLASSICS (CLAS) Classics (CLAS) Programs. Courses. University of New Hampshire 1

CLASSICS (CLAS) Classics (CLAS) Programs. Courses. University of New Hampshire 1 University of New Hampshire 1 CLASSICS (CLAS) Classics encompasses the interdisciplinary study of the Greeks and Romans, as well as the ways in which the ancient world's influence extends to the Medieval

More information

Classical Studies Courses-1

Classical Studies Courses-1 Classical Studies Courses-1 CLS 201/History of Ancient Philosophy (same as PHL 201) Course tracing the development of philosophy in the West from its beginnings in 6 th century B.C. Greece through the

More information

University of Missouri. Fall 2018 Courses

University of Missouri. Fall 2018 Courses University of Missouri Fall 2018 Courses The Department of Ancient Mediterranean Studies is the new home of Classical Studies and Archaeology at Mizzou! Look inside for information about Fall 2018 courses

More information

CLASSICS. Departmental Honors. Introduction. Educational Objectives. Degree Programs. Major in Classics. Classics 1

CLASSICS. Departmental Honors. Introduction. Educational Objectives. Degree Programs. Major in Classics. Classics 1 Classics 1 CLASSICS http://www.as.miami.edu/classics Introduction All culture and civilizations have their classics: those works of art that are seen as the best of their kind, have withstood the test

More information

Course Outline TIME AND LOCATION MWF 11:30-12:20 ML 349

Course Outline TIME AND LOCATION MWF 11:30-12:20 ML 349 Course Outline SURVEY OF GREEK LITERATURE (CLAS 231) University of Waterloo, Fall Term, 2011 INSTRUCTOR Ron Kroeker, PhD Office: ML 225 Office hours: Tuesday 2:30-3:30 pm Wednesday 1:00-2:00 pm Email:

More information

Classics. Affiliated Faculty: Sarah H. Davies, History (on Sabbatical, Fall 2017) Michelle Jenkins, Philosophy Matthew Bost, Rhetoric Studies

Classics. Affiliated Faculty: Sarah H. Davies, History (on Sabbatical, Fall 2017) Michelle Jenkins, Philosophy Matthew Bost, Rhetoric Studies Classics Chair: Dana Burgess Kathleen J. Shea Elizabeth Vandiver Affiliated Faculty: Sarah H. Davies, History (on Sabbatical, Fall 2017) Michelle Jenkins, Philosophy Matthew Bost, Rhetoric Studies Classics

More information

Humanities 1A Reading List and Semester Plan: Fall Lindahl, Peter, Cooper, Scaff

Humanities 1A Reading List and Semester Plan: Fall Lindahl, Peter, Cooper, Scaff Humanities 1A Reading List and Semester Plan: Fall 2015 1 Lindahl, Peter, Cooper, Scaff Locations for Lecture and Seminars: Lectures are in Morris Dailey Hall. Seminars are in the following rooms: Lindahl

More information

CLASSICS. Bachelor's Degree. Minor. Faculty. Classics 1

CLASSICS. Bachelor's Degree. Minor. Faculty. Classics 1 Classics 1 CLASSICS Through consultation with the undergraduate advisor, the bachelor's degree in classics is tailored to the student's interests in the field. Major and minor programs can be arranged

More information

Humanities Learning Outcomes

Humanities Learning Outcomes University Major/Dept Learning Outcome Source Creative Writing The undergraduate degree in creative writing emphasizes knowledge and awareness of: literary works, including the genres of fiction, poetry,

More information

21H.301 The Ancient World: Greece Fall 2004

21H.301 The Ancient World: Greece Fall 2004 MIT OpenCourseWare http://ocw.mit.edu 21H.301 The Ancient World: Greece Fall 2004 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms. 21H.301 THE ANCIENT

More information

Classics and Philosophy

Classics and Philosophy Classics and Philosophy CHAIRPERSON Anna Panayotou Triantaphyllopoulou VICE-CHAIRPERSON Georgios Xenis PROFESSORS Anna Panayotou Triantaphyllopoulou ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS Dimitris Portides Antonios Tsakmakis

More information

Classics. Facilities. The Faculty. Undergraduate Programs

Classics. Facilities. The Faculty. Undergraduate Programs Classics / 121 Classics The discipline of Classics has played a central role in the teaching and research missions of Johns Hopkins University from the time of its foundation. Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve,

More information

Classical Civilizations

Classical Civilizations University of California, Berkeley 1 Classical Civilizations Bachelor of Arts (BA) The major in Classical Civilizations is highly interdisciplinary and features many options. This major allows students

More information

Department of Classics Fall 2018 Undergraduate Courses

Department of Classics Fall 2018 Undergraduate Courses Department of Classics Undergraduate Courses ARH2090 Great Discoveries in World Archaeology (3) Dr. A. DeGiorgi This course investigates the meaning and the role of archaeology in shaping our past and

More information

HUMANITIES (HUMN) Humanities (HUMN) 1. HUMN 201 General Humanities I (to 1400) 3 Credits

HUMANITIES (HUMN) Humanities (HUMN) 1. HUMN 201 General Humanities I (to 1400) 3 Credits Humanities (HUMN) 1 HUMANITIES (HUMN) All HUMN courses were previously listed as GNHU. HUMN 115 Troy and the Trojan War 3 For more than 3,000 years the story of the Trojan War has fascinated and attracted

More information

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Classical Studies (CLAS) Contact Information. Bachelor's Program. Program Advisor. Professors. Associate Professor.

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Classical Studies (CLAS) Contact Information. Bachelor's Program. Program Advisor. Professors. Associate Professor. Classical Studies 1 CLASSICAL STUDIES Contact Information Classical and European Studies https://ces.rice.edu/ Rayzor Hall 207 713-348-4151 Christian J. Emden Department Chair emden@rice.edu Classical

More information

No course that is used to meet one of the following requirements may be used simultaneously to meet a requirement under any other category.

No course that is used to meet one of the following requirements may be used simultaneously to meet a requirement under any other category. Classical Studies Director of Undergraduate Studies: David Wray, G-B 437, 702-8563, d-wray@uchicago.edu Administrative Assistant: Kathleen M. Fox, Cl 22B, 702-8514, kfox@midway.uchicago.edu E-mail: classics-department@uchicago.edu

More information

Song of War: Readings from Vergil's Aeneid 2004

Song of War: Readings from Vergil's Aeneid 2004 Prentice Hall Song of War: Readings from Vergil's C O R R E L A T E D T O I. Standard Number 1 (Goal One): Communicate in a Classical Language Standard Rationale: This standard focuses on the pronunciation,

More information

I FLORIDA. Application Form for General Education and Writing/Math Requirement Classification C.) CREDIT HOURS: 3 D.) PREREQUISITES: none

I FLORIDA. Application Form for General Education and Writing/Math Requirement Classification C.) CREDIT HOURS: 3 D.) PREREQUISITES: none UF UNIVERSITY of I FLORIDA Application Form for General Education and Writing/Math Requirement Classification Current Information: I. A.) DEPARTMENT NAME: Ciassics 8.) COURSE NUMBER, and TITLE: _CL T 3340

More information

Course Revision Form

Course Revision Form 298 JOHN JAY COLLEGE OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE The City University of New York Undergraduate Curriculum and Academic Standards Committee Course Revision Form This form should be used for revisions to course

More information

SYLLABUSES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS

SYLLABUSES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS 1 SYLLABUSES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS CHINESE HISTORICAL STUDIES PURPOSE The MA in Chinese Historical Studies curriculum aims at providing students with the requisite knowledge and training to

More information

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2018

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2018 CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2018 CLAR 120 Ancient Cities This course is an introduction to Mediterranean archaeology, surveying archaeological sites from the Neolithic period (ca.

More information

Undergraduate Course Descriptions Spring 2019

Undergraduate Course Descriptions Spring 2019 CLASSICS CL 100 Archaeology and Rediscovery in the Classical World Alessandro Sebastiani MWF/10:00 am 10:50 am/110 Knox #21764 (3 credits) This course examines the search for the evidence for ancient Greek

More information

College of Arts & Sciences. The Appian Way, Queen of Roads (320 BC). Rome to Brundisium (Brindisi) Course Schedule

College of Arts & Sciences. The Appian Way, Queen of Roads (320 BC). Rome to Brundisium (Brindisi) Course Schedule College of Arts & Sciences Department OF Classics The Appian Way, Queen of Roads (320 BC). Rome to Brundisium (Brindisi) SPRING 2019 Course Schedule Call 305-284-6326 for an advising appointment or visit

More information

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2018

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2018 CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2018 CLAR 120 Ancient Cities This course is an introduction to Mediterranean archaeology, surveying archaeological sites from the Neolithic period (ca.

More information

California State University, Sacramento HRS10, sec.2: Introduction to the Humanities, Art and Ideas of the West Fall 2008 GE Area C3

California State University, Sacramento HRS10, sec.2: Introduction to the Humanities, Art and Ideas of the West Fall 2008 GE Area C3 California State University, Sacramento HRS10, sec.2: Introduction to the Humanities, Art and Ideas of the West Fall 2008 GE Area C3 Monday and Wednesday, 1:30 2:45 PM, MND 1020 R. Diane Anderson, Instructor

More information

Spring 2018 Undergraduate Classics Courses

Spring 2018 Undergraduate Classics Courses Spring 2018 Undergraduate Classics Courses ARH3150 Art and Archaeology of Ancient Italy (3) Dr. J. Pickett This course is a survey of Italian art and archaeology including early Italy, the Etruscans, and

More information

THE GOLDEN AGE POETRY

THE GOLDEN AGE POETRY THE GOLDEN AGE 5th and 4th Century Greek Culture POETRY Epic poetry, e.g. Homer, Hesiod (Very) long narratives Mythological, heroic or supernatural themes More objective Lyric poetry, e.g. Pindar and Sappho

More information

Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2010

Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2010 1332 Elementary Sanskrit II Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2010 Revision Date: 4/11/2016 LING 1132, SANSK 1132 351-267 Class #: 4430 4 credits. MTRF 10:10-11:00 Ruppel, A. GSH 181 Prerequisite:

More information

INTRODUCTION TO CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION: GREECE

INTRODUCTION TO CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION: GREECE Syllabus INTRODUCTION TO CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION: GREECE - 28218 Last update 15-01-2014 HU Credits: 2 Degree/Cycle: 1st degree (Bachelor) Responsible Department: classics Academic year: 1 Semester: 1st

More information

FRENCH MINOR COURSE DESCRIPTION

FRENCH MINOR COURSE DESCRIPTION FRENCH MINOR COURSE DESCRIPTION FREN 1311 Beginning French I A study of the essentials of French grammar, pronunciation, elementary conversation and prose reading. FREN 1312 Beginning French II A continuation

More information

The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R MacDonald on FREE shipping on qualifying offers

The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R MacDonald on FREE shipping on qualifying offers The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R MacDonald on FREE shipping on qualifying offers In this groundbreaking book, Dennis R MacDonald offers

More information

ISTINYE UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE and LITERATURE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

ISTINYE UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE and LITERATURE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS ISTINYE UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE and LITERATURE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS 1 st SEMESTER ELL 105 Introduction to Literary Forms I An introduction to forms of literature

More information

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Spring 2019

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Spring 2019 CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Spring 2019 CLAR 120 Ancient Cities This course is an introduction to Mediterranean archaeology, surveying archaeological sites from the Neolithic period (ca.

More information

Interdepartmental Learning Outcomes

Interdepartmental Learning Outcomes University Major/Dept Learning Outcome Source Linguistics The undergraduate degree in linguistics emphasizes knowledge and awareness of: the fundamental architecture of language in the domains of phonetics

More information

CLAS 131: Greek and Roman Mythology Spring 2013 MWF 2-2:50 Murphey Hall 116

CLAS 131: Greek and Roman Mythology Spring 2013 MWF 2-2:50 Murphey Hall 116 CLAS 131: Greek and Roman Mythology Spring 2013 MWF 2-2:50 Murphey Hall 116 Robyn LeBlanc Erika Weiberg Office: Murphey 114 Office: Murphey 205 rleblanc@email.unc.edu eweiberg@email.unc.edu M 1-2, F 1-2

More information

HIS 101: HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1648 Spring 2010 Section Monday & Wednesday, 1:25-2:40 p.m.; LA 225

HIS 101: HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1648 Spring 2010 Section Monday & Wednesday, 1:25-2:40 p.m.; LA 225 HIS 101: HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1648 Spring 2010 Section 85323 Monday & Wednesday, 1:25-2:40 p.m.; LA 225 Professor Linda Bregstein Scherr Office: LA 121 Office Hours: Monday & Wednesday 9:30-10

More information

The Shimer School Core Curriculum

The Shimer School Core Curriculum Basic Core Studies The Shimer School Core Curriculum Humanities 111 Fundamental Concepts of Art and Music Humanities 112 Literature in the Ancient World Humanities 113 Literature in the Modern World Social

More information

HIS 101: HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1648 Fall 2009 Section Monday & Wednesday, 1:25-2:40 p.m.; AD 119

HIS 101: HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1648 Fall 2009 Section Monday & Wednesday, 1:25-2:40 p.m.; AD 119 HIS 101: HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1648 Fall 2009 Section 82057 Monday & Wednesday, 1:25-2:40 p.m.; AD 119 Professor Linda Bregstein Scherr Office: LA 121 Office Hours: Monday & Wednesday 9-10

More information

ANTHROPOLOGY 6198:005 Spring 2003 MEDITERRANEAN ARCHAEOLOGY USF - Tampa

ANTHROPOLOGY 6198:005 Spring 2003 MEDITERRANEAN ARCHAEOLOGY USF - Tampa ANTHROPOLOGY 6198:005 Spring 2003 MEDITERRANEAN ARCHAEOLOGY USF - Tampa Instructor: Dr. Robert H. Tykot (Associate Professor) Office: SOC 046A Office Hours: MW 2:00-3:00 pm Phone: 813 974-7279 Email: rtykot@chuma1.cas.usf.edu

More information

English English ENG 221. Literature/Culture/Ideas. ENG 222. Genre(s). ENG 235. Survey of English Literature: From Beowulf to the Eighteenth Century.

English English ENG 221. Literature/Culture/Ideas. ENG 222. Genre(s). ENG 235. Survey of English Literature: From Beowulf to the Eighteenth Century. English English ENG 221. Literature/Culture/Ideas. 3 credits. This course will take a thematic approach to literature by examining multiple literary texts that engage with a common course theme concerned

More information

COURSE OUTLINE Humanities: Ancient to Medieval

COURSE OUTLINE Humanities: Ancient to Medieval Butler Community College Humanities and Social Sciences Division Grayson Barnes Revised Spring 2011 Implemented Spring 2012 Textbook Update Fall 2017 COURSE OUTLINE Humanities: Ancient to Medieval Course

More information

The Oxford History Of Ancient Egypt Download Free (EPUB, PDF)

The Oxford History Of Ancient Egypt Download Free (EPUB, PDF) The Oxford History Of Ancient Egypt Download Free (EPUB, PDF) The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt uniquely covers 700,000 years of ancient Egypt, from c. 700,000 BC to AD 311. Following the story from

More information

Request your complimentary exam copy. Request your e-inspection copy

Request your complimentary exam copy. Request your e-inspection copy The Routledge History of the Ancient World Featuring books from some of the most reputable scholars of the ancient world, such as Simon Hornblower and Averil Cameron, the Routledge History of the Ancient

More information

Classics Handbook for One-Year and One-Term Students 2018 /19

Classics Handbook for One-Year and One-Term Students 2018 /19 Classics Handbook for One-Year and One-Term Students 2018 /19 Study Abroad Co-ordinator The Study Abroad Co-ordinator for Classics is: Dr Martine Cuypers Office: Arts Building B6.015 (6th Floor, middle

More information

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Written examination. Friday 17 November 2017

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Written examination. Friday 17 November 2017 Victorian Certificate of Education 2017 CLASSICAL STUDIES Written examination Friday 17 November 2017 Reading time: 3.00 pm to 3.15 pm (15 minutes) Writing time: 3.15 pm to 5.15 pm (2 hours) QUESTION BOOK

More information

MS6 MacDouall Manuscripts

MS6 MacDouall Manuscripts MS6 MacDouall Manuscripts About the collection: Collection of holograph papers and working notes of Professor Charles MacDouall (1813-83), Professor of Latin and subsequently of Greek at Queen s College,

More information

ART 320: ANCIENT GREEK ART AND ARCHITECTURE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE TO 31 BCE Fall credits

ART 320: ANCIENT GREEK ART AND ARCHITECTURE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE TO 31 BCE Fall credits ART 320: ANCIENT GREEK ART AND ARCHITECTURE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE TO 31 BCE Fall 2015 3 credits Professor Dr. Priscilla West westp@onid.orst.edu (541) 729-9866 Office 203 Fairbanks Hours: W 12:30-13:30 p.m.

More information

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON Department of History. Semester II,

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON Department of History. Semester II, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON Department of History COURSE NO. COURSE TITLE INSTRUCTOR 111 Ancient Near East and Greece Mr. Clover COURSE DESCRIPTION This course will consider the destinies of civilization

More information

Fall HISTORY 110A: WORLD CIVILIZATION California State University, Los Angeles PROFESSOR S. BURSTEIN

Fall HISTORY 110A: WORLD CIVILIZATION California State University, Los Angeles PROFESSOR S. BURSTEIN Fall 2009 HISTORY 110A: WORLD CIVILIZATION California State University, Los Angeles PROFESSOR S. BURSTEIN Office Hours: KH B4024: MW 9:00-9:30, 12:30-1:20 Phone: 323-343-2032 Email: sburste@calstatela.edu

More information

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Written examination. Friday 16 November 2018

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Written examination. Friday 16 November 2018 Victorian Certificate of Education 2018 CLASSICAL STUDIES Written examination Friday 16 November 2018 Reading time: 3.00 pm to 3.15 pm (15 minutes) Writing time: 3.15 pm to 5.15 pm (2 hours) QUESTION BOOK

More information

Scholarship 2017 Classical Studies

Scholarship 2017 Classical Studies 93404Q 934042 S Scholarship 2017 Classical Studies 2.00 p.m. Thursday 23 November 2017 Time allowed: Three hours Total marks: 24 QUESTION BOOKLET Answer THREE questions from this booklet: TWO questions

More information

Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2011

Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2011 CLASS 1332 Elementary Sanskrit II Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2011 Revision Date: 01/26/11 LING 1132, SANSK 1132 351-267 Class #: 2654 4 credits. MTRF 10:10-11:00 Ruppel, A. GSH 122

More information

Department of Humanities and Social Science TOPICS IN LITERATURE AND SOCIETY SPRING 2016 ITB 213E WEEK ONE NOTES

Department of Humanities and Social Science TOPICS IN LITERATURE AND SOCIETY SPRING 2016 ITB 213E WEEK ONE NOTES Barry Stocker Barry.Stocker@itu.edu.tr https://barrystockerac.wordpress.com Department of Humanities and Social Science Faculty of Science and Letters TOPICS IN LITERATURE AND SOCIETY SPRING 2016 ITB 213E

More information

AP ENGLISH (CLASSICS ACADEMY) In AP English Classical Literature and its Resonance, students study literature from the classic period including but

AP ENGLISH (CLASSICS ACADEMY) In AP English Classical Literature and its Resonance, students study literature from the classic period including but AP ENGLISH (CLASSICS ACADEMY) In AP English Classical Literature and its Resonance, students study literature from the classic period including but not limited to works by Plato, Hesiod, Homer, Ovid, Aeschylus,

More information

Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2016

Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2016 1332 Elementary Sanskrit II Department of Classics Course Offerings Spring 2016 Revision Date: 1/12/2016 LING 1132, SANSK 1132 351267 Class #: 5087 4 credits. MTRF 11:15-12:05 Clary, T. Prerequisite: 1331.

More information

Department of Classics

Department of Classics Fall 2014 Course Catalog Department of Classics Fall 2014 Courses ARCH 0026 Ancient Egypt: Civilizations of the Nile and Near East CLST: CLS 26, HIST 76 J. Matthew Harrington K+ MW 4:30-5:45 PM ARCH 0030

More information

Arts and Literature Breadth Fall 2017

Arts and Literature Breadth Fall 2017 Subject Course # Arts and Literature Breadth Fall 2017 Course Title AFRICAM 4A Africa: History and Culture AFRICAM 5A African American Life and Culture in the United States AFRICAM 100 Black Intellectual

More information

Department of Classics

Department of Classics Department of Classics Fall 2017 Course Catalogue Fall 2017 Courses ARCH 0026 01 Ancient Egypt Matthew Harrington K+ MW 4:30-5:45 CLST: CLS 26/HIST 76 ARCH 0030 01 Prehistoric Archaeology Lauren Sullivan

More information

Principal version published in the University of Innsbruck Bulletin of 4 June 2012, Issue 31, No. 314

Principal version published in the University of Innsbruck Bulletin of 4 June 2012, Issue 31, No. 314 Note: The following curriculum is a consolidated version. It is legally non-binding and for informational purposes only. The legally binding versions are found in the University of Innsbruck Bulletins

More information

#11772 PLATO S REPUBLIC

#11772 PLATO S REPUBLIC C a p t i o n e d M e d i a P r o g r a m VOICE (800) 237-6213 TTY (800) 237-6819 FAX (800) 538-5636 E-MAIL info@captionedmedia.org WEB www.captionedmedia.org #11772 PLATO S REPUBLIC DISCOVERY SCHOOL,

More information

Brill Companions to Classical Reception Series

Brill Companions to Classical Reception Series University of Cyprus From the SelectedWorks of Kyriakos N. Demetriou Fall October 6, 2013 Brill Companions to Classical Reception Series Kyriakos N. Demetriou, University of Cyprus Available at: https://works.bepress.com/kyriakos_demetriou/31/

More information

Seven Wonders of the World: Magic Metropolis: Teacher s Guide

Seven Wonders of the World: Magic Metropolis: Teacher s Guide Seven Wonders of the World: Magic Metropolis: Teacher s Guide Grade Level: 6-8 Curriculum Focus: Ancient History Lesson Duration: Two class periods Program Description The prototype of the modern city

More information

Fall 2018 TR 8:00-9:15 PETR 106

Fall 2018 TR 8:00-9:15 PETR 106 CLAS 261-500: Great Books of the Classical Tradition Fall 2018 TR 8:00-9:15 PETR 106 Instructor: Justin Lake Office: Academic Building 330A Office Hours: Monday 10:00-11:00 and by appointment Phone: 979-845-2124

More information

Western Civilization I ( )

Western Civilization I ( ) Western Civilization I (43.105-203) Instructor: Andrew Drenas, D.Phil. Classroom: Olsen 401 Class Meetings: MoWe, 11:00-12:15 E-mail: Website: Office Hours: Texts: Andrew_Drenas@uml.edu http://faculty.uml.edu/adrenas/teaching/westcivi.aspx

More information

Learning Outcomes After you have finished the course you should:

Learning Outcomes After you have finished the course you should: ARTH103 Global Art History Survey: From Pre-History to the 14 th Century Summer Session I 2019 3 Credits Monday-Friday 8.30-10.20am Professor Jonathan Shirland Contact Information: Jonathan.Shirland@bridgew.edu

More information

English. English 80 Basic Language Skills. English 82 Introduction to Reading Skills. Students will: English 84 Development of Reading and Writing

English. English 80 Basic Language Skills. English 82 Introduction to Reading Skills. Students will: English 84 Development of Reading and Writing English English 80 Basic Language Skills 1. Demonstrate their ability to recognize context clues that assist with vocabulary acquisition necessary to comprehend paragraph-length non-fiction texts written

More information

The Cambridge History Of Classical Literature, Vol. 1: Greek Literature (English And Greek Edition) READ ONLINE

The Cambridge History Of Classical Literature, Vol. 1: Greek Literature (English And Greek Edition) READ ONLINE The Cambridge History Of Classical Literature, Vol. 1: Greek Literature (English And Greek Edition) READ ONLINE If looking for the ebook The Cambridge History of Classical Literature, Vol. 1: Greek Literature

More information

The University of Melbourne s Classics

The University of Melbourne s Classics Engaging with Classics and Ancient World Studies: Museum Learning and the Between Artefact and Text exhibition ANNELIES VAN DE VEN AND ANDREW JAMIESON The Between Artefact and Text exhibition in the Classics

More information

Raffaella Cribiore Office: Silver 503L Office phone: Office Hours: and by appointment

Raffaella Cribiore   Office: Silver 503L Office phone: Office Hours: and by appointment FRSEM-UA Travel and Communication in the Ancient World Fall 2017 Raffaella Cribiore Email: rc119@nyu.edu Office: Silver 503L Office phone: 212 998-3827 Office Hours: and by appointment TEXTS (ordered at

More information

UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017

UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017 UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017 Students are required to complete 128 credits selected from the modules below, with ENGL6808, ENGL6814 and ENGL6824 as compulsory modules. Adding to the above,

More information

Mythology: Timeless Tales Of Gods And Heroes Free Ebooks

Mythology: Timeless Tales Of Gods And Heroes Free Ebooks Mythology: Timeless Tales Of Gods And Heroes Free Ebooks Since its original publication by Little, Brown and Company in 1942, Edith Hamilton's Mythology has sold millions of copies throughout the world

More information

Indiana Academic Super Bowl. Fine Arts Round Senior Division Coaches Practice. A Program of the Indiana Association of School Principals

Indiana Academic Super Bowl. Fine Arts Round Senior Division Coaches Practice. A Program of the Indiana Association of School Principals Indiana Academic Super Bowl Fine Arts Round 2015 Senior Division Coaches Practice A Program of the Indiana Association of School Principals Students: Throughout this competition, foreign names and words

More information

Cultural Identity Studies

Cultural Identity Studies Cultural Identity Studies Programme Requirements: Modern Languages - Cultural Identity Studies - 2018/9 - September 2018 Cultural Identity Studies - MLitt 80 credits from Module List: CO5001 - CO5002,

More information

CLSC (CLSC) CLSC (CLSC) 1

CLSC (CLSC) CLSC (CLSC) 1 CLSC (CLSC) 1 CLSC (CLSC) CLSC 102. Introduction to Byzantine History, 500-1500. 3 Units. Development of the Byzantine empire from the emperor Constantine's conversion to Christianity and founding of the

More information

Chapter 2 TEST The Rise of Greece

Chapter 2 TEST The Rise of Greece Chapter 2 TEST The Rise of Greece I. Multiple Choice (1 point each) 1. What Greek epic poem recounts the story of Achilles and the Trojan War? a) The Odyssey b) The Iliad c) The Aeneid d) The Epic of Gilgamesh

More information

Western Civilization I (HIST 1050)

Western Civilization I (HIST 1050) Instructor: Andrew Drenas, D.Phil. Classroom: Dugan 101 Class Meetings: TuTh, 8:00-9:15 a.m. E-mail: Website: Office Hours: Texts: Andrew_Drenas@uml.edu http://faculty.uml.edu/adrenas/teaching/westcivi.aspx

More information

EFFECTIVE DATE: Fall 2011

EFFECTIVE DATE: Fall 2011 ART 130 World Art History I Course Package Approved: December 3, 2010 EFFECTIVE DATE: Fall 2011 COURSE PACKAGE FORM Contact Person (s) HEIDI HECKMAN Date of proposal to Curriculum Sub-committee: Purpose:

More information

COURSE SLO ASSESSMENT 4-YEAR TIMELINE REPORT (ECC)

COURSE SLO ASSESSMENT 4-YEAR TIMELINE REPORT (ECC) COURSE SLO ASSESSMENT 4-YEAR TIMELINE REPORT (ECC) HUMANITIES DIVISION - ENGLISH ECC: ENGL 28 Images of Women in Literature Upon completion of the course, successful students will identify female archetypes,

More information

ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND THE ALEXANDER TRADITION CLAS 0810A CRN Spring Semester 2017

ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND THE ALEXANDER TRADITION CLAS 0810A CRN Spring Semester 2017 ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND THE ALEXANDER TRADITION CLAS 0810A CRN 14090 Spring Semester 2017 Instructor: Prof. John F. Cherry Lecture Hour: MWF 11-11:50 am Place: Rhode Island Hall Room 108 Office: Joukowsky

More information

The Romans: From Village To Empire: A History Of Rome From Earliest Times To The End Of The Western Empire PDF

The Romans: From Village To Empire: A History Of Rome From Earliest Times To The End Of The Western Empire PDF The Romans: From Village To Empire: A History Of Rome From Earliest Times To The End Of The Western Empire PDF "The Romans is currently the best textbook on Roman history available in English."--Walter

More information

COURSE SLO REPORT - HUMANITIES DIVISION

COURSE SLO REPORT - HUMANITIES DIVISION COURSE SLO REPORT - HUMANITIES DIVISION COURSE SLO STATEMENTS - ENGLISH Course ID Course Name Course SLO Name Course SLO Statement 12 15A 15B 1A 1B Introduction to Fiction SLO #1 Examine short stories

More information

Freshman Seminar Unusual Encounters with the Ancient Greeks and Romans FRSEM-UA Fall 2018 Thursday, 12:30-3:00

Freshman Seminar Unusual Encounters with the Ancient Greeks and Romans FRSEM-UA Fall 2018 Thursday, 12:30-3:00 Freshman Seminar Unusual Encounters with the Ancient Greeks and Romans FRSEM-UA 697.001 Fall 2018 Thursday, 12:30-3:00 Professor Michael Peachin Department of Classics Silver Center 503D mp8@nyu.edu COURSE

More information

English (ENGL) English (ENGL) 1

English (ENGL) English (ENGL) 1 English (ENGL) 1 English (ENGL) ENGL 150 Introduction to the Major 1.0 SH [ ] Required of all majors. This course invites students to explore the theoretical, philosophical, or creative groundings of the

More information

Fall 2017 Art History Courses

Fall 2017 Art History Courses Undergraduate Courses: Fall 2017 Art History Courses ARTH 103 - Survey of Art I Prerequisites: None, sections 003, 004, 007, & 902 open to School of the Arts majors only Introductory survey of art from

More information

Program General Structure

Program General Structure Program General Structure o Non-thesis Option Type of Courses No. of Courses No. of Units Required Core 9 27 Elective (if any) 3 9 Research Project 1 3 13 39 Study Units Program Study Plan First Level:

More information

University of Canterbury

University of Canterbury University of Canterbury Contents Contacts Department of Classics... 3 Classics Staff... 3 Undergraduate Information Introduction: What is Classics? Why Study Classics?... 4 The Classics Department at

More information

ENGL S092 Improving Writing Skills ENGL S110 Introduction to College Writing ENGL S111 Methods of Written Communication

ENGL S092 Improving Writing Skills ENGL S110 Introduction to College Writing ENGL S111 Methods of Written Communication ENGL S092 Improving Writing Skills 1. Identify elements of sentence and paragraph construction and compose effective sentences and paragraphs. 2. Compose coherent and well-organized essays. 3. Present

More information

ENGLISH (ENGL) 101. Freshman Composition Critical Reading and Writing. 121H. Ancient Epic: Literature and Composition.

ENGLISH (ENGL) 101. Freshman Composition Critical Reading and Writing. 121H. Ancient Epic: Literature and Composition. Head of the Department: Professor A. Parrill Professors: Dowie, Fick, Fredell, German, Gold, Hanson, Kearney, Louth, McAllister, Walter Associate Professors: Bedell, Dorrill, Faust, K.Mitchell, Ply, Wiemelt

More information