HUM 098 Myth, Reason, and Faith

Similar documents
V Conversations of the West Antiquity and the Middle Ages (Tentative) Schedule Fall 2004

LBCL 292: Modes of Expression and Interpretation I

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

Honors 311: Ideas in Conflict Ancient World

Greek Intellectual History: Tradition, Challenge, and Response Spring HIST & RELS 4350

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG215 WORLD LITERATURE BEFORE Credit Hours. Presented by: Trish Loomis

COURSE INFORMATION REVELLE HUMANITIES I WINTER 2015 LECTURE C: MWF 2:00, RBC Auditorium

HUMN 220: Western Humanities I. Class meeting time: M W 12:30pm - 2:10pm Office location: Welles 103

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

Death and Love. Policies

Thematic Description. Overview

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

21H.301 The Ancient World: Greece Fall 2004

Texts and Ideas: Antiquity and the Enlightenment

College of Arts and Sciences

CLAS 167B Classical Myths Told and Retold Course Syllabus (draft )

In order to enrich our experience of great works of philosophy and literature we will include, whenever feasible, speakers, films and music.

ENGLISH 160 WORLD LITERATURE THROUGH THE RENAISSANCE FALL PROFESSOR LESLEY DANZIGER Friday 9:35 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Home Ec.

CTI 310 / C C 301: Introduction to Ancient Greece Unique #33755, MWF 2:00 3:00 PM Waggener Hall, Room 308

ASSIGNMENTS. Attendance: 5% Paper 1 25% Paper 2 35% Final Exam (TBD) 35%

Classical Studies Courses-1

University of Missouri. Fall 2018 Courses

Classical Studies Courses-1

Douglas Honors College Humanistic Understanding II

POLI 300A: Ancient and Medieval Political Thought Fall 2018 Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday 9:30AM 10:20AM COR A229 Course Description Course Texts:

The Meaning of the Arts Fall 2013 Online

The Voyage of the Hero in Greek and Roman Literature

LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE LBCL 393: Modes of Expression and Interpretation II. ATTENDANCE IS REQUIRED Section A: MW 14:45-16:00 I.

COURSE OUTLINE Humanities: Ancient to Medieval

Scottsdale Preparatory Academy Consumable Books

Old Western Culture. A Christian Approach to the Great Books. Workbook and Answer Key THE GREEKS THE EPICS. The Poems of Homer.

ARISTOTLE. PHILO 381(W) Sec. 051[4810] Fall 2009 Professor Adluri Monday/Wednesday, 7:00-8:15pm

Latin Epic. The University of Western Ontario Classical Studies 3150F, Fall 2016 Randall Pogorzelski

Course Syllabus. Ancient Greek Philosophy (direct to Philosophy) (toll-free; ask for the UM-Flint Philosophy Department)

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

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

Scholarship 2017 Classical Studies

REQUIRED TEXTS AND VIDEOS

Course Revision Form

web address: address: Description

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

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Written examination. Friday 17 November 2017

PH th Century Philosophy Ryerson University Department of Philosophy Mondays, 3-6pm Fall 2010

ENGLISH 416: Chaucer s Canterbury Tales Spring SLN T. Th in LL150

DRAMA IN LONDON: ANCIENT, SHAKESPEAREAN, MODERN: Text and Performance

Associated Canadian Theological Schools of Trinity Western University. BIB 500: Introduction to Biblical Studies

Existentialist Metaphysics PHIL 235 FALL 2011 MWF 2:20-3:20

Trivium Preparatory Classics to Keep

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

HUMANITIES, ARTS AND DESIGN [HU]

CEDAR CREST COLLEGE REL Spring 2010, Tuesdays/Thursdays, 2:30 3:45 p.m. Issues in Death and Dying 3 credits

Schedule of Assignments: introduction: problems and perspectives; background to the Homeric poems

Aesthetics. Phil-267 Department of Philosophy Wesleyan University Spring Thursday 7:00-9:50 pm Location: Wyllys 115

Philosophy 2220 (DE): Philosophy and Literary Arts Summer, 2013 Joseph Arel

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

The Catholic University of America Drama Theater Topics Spirituality and Theories of Acting Fall 2002

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

Final Syllabus. The Long Tour Destinations in Greece: Athens Delphi Delos Sounion. The Short Tour Destinations in Germany: Lübeck Hamburg

AMERICA, PROSPERITY, DEPRESSION, AND WAR

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY GALLATIN School of Individualized Study FATE AND FREE WILL IN THE EPIC TRADITION

Books The following books are required and are available at the Bookstore:

OT 301 PENTATEUCH Fall 2016 Tuesday 7:00-9:40 p.m. Rev

Shimer College HUMANITIES 2: Poetry, Drama, and Fiction Spring 2010

FRESHMAN SEMINAR On Being Human FRSEM-UA 630 Fall 2018 EPICS 4.1 : THE ODYSSEY, THE AENEID, PARADISE LOST, MOBY DICK. Silver 618 Thursday 9:30 12:00

CLASS NAME TITLE OF TEXT COVER IMAGE AUTHOR ISBN# PUBLISHER NOTES. English 9 Divine Comedy Dante Penguin Recommend new purchase

PHIL 260. ANCIENT GREEK PHILOSOPHY. Fall 2017 Tuesday & Thursday: (Oddfellows 106)

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

Rhetorical Theory for Writing Studies

Note: the class does not meet on January 17, April 4, or April 11. One additional meeting will be held on Monday, April 21, 9:30-11:20.

2. Introduction to the Aeneid: Roman Culture Virgil as an Author Politics and Poetry

Readings In Ancient Greek Philosophy Fifth Edition

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Written examination. Friday 16 November 2018

Western Civilization (GHP, GL, GPM) Ancient Middle East Age of Reformation Fall 2010, MHRA 1214, Tuesday

POWER AND PASSION: From the Bible to Modernity I-HUM 33B SPRING Office A Office: 20-22M Hrs: Wed 1:30-3:00; Thur 1:30-3:00

The University of Georgia CLAS 4300/6300. Ancient Daily Life. Tu/Th 5:00-6:15, SLC 207

Mythology: Timeless Tales Of Gods And Heroes Free Ebooks

PLEASE NOTE: I have a no-electronic-devices policy in the classroom.

Tales Of The Greek Heroes (Puffin Classics) PDF

WVC Guidelines for Citing References and Other Important Information

University of Pennsylvania Creative Writing: English Course Syllabus Spring Semester 2014 Classroom: Fisher-Bennett 25 Wednesday, 2-5 PM

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

SOPHOMORE ENGLISH. Prerequisites: Passing Frosh English

LAT 111, 112, and 251 or consent of instructor

1) Three summaries (2-3 pages; pick three out of the following four): due: 9/9 5% due: 9/16 5% due: 9/23 5% due: 9/30 5%

English 381 ` Professor Wendy Furman-Adams Discourses of Desire Office: Hoover 215

121 Bible I: Introduction. Course Goals Books Advance Assignments

The Complete World Of Greek Mythology Read Free Books and Download ebooks

How to Do a Synthetic Bible Study

History of Creativity. Why Study History? Important Considerations 8/29/11. Provide context Thoughts about creativity in flux

Annotations on Georg Lukács's Theory of the Novel

Department of Philosophy Florida State University

JONATHAN FENNO Curriculum Vitae. SPECIAL INTERESTS Greek and Latin Poetry, Greek Religion, Ancient Athletics, Romans in Cinema

Learning Outcomes After you have finished the course you should:

SAN FRANCISCO CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC

Humanities Learning Outcomes

HST 290: The Practice of History

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

Humanities 4: Critical Evaluation in the Humanities Instructor: Office: Phone: Course Description Learning Outcomes Required Texts

Carleton University Winter 2012 Department of English. ENGL 4301 B: Studies in Renaissance Literature Tragedy!

Department of English and Writing Studies Western University. English 4050G January 2015

Transcription:

Course Logistics: HUM 098 Myth, Reason, and Faith [T]he search for, and the preservation of, values of the present and for the future... requires abandonment of spurious, restrictive canons of eternal greatness and eternal truth: we must have the historical sense and the moral courage of the German classicist who said, addressing students at the Free University of Berlin in 1962, We are experiencing the collapse of a lie, the humanist lie of the identity of the true, the beautiful, and the good. M.I. Finley (1972) HUM 098.03 TR 9:30-10:52AM, Hunt 124 M 7-8:52PM, Bio 101 Instructor: Professor John Hunter, Program in Comparative Humanities Office: Carnegie 209 D (access through 209 A) Office Hours: TR 11-12, W 1-2, or by appointment Phone: 7-1549 Email: jchunter@bucknell.edu Course Description: This course is an introduction to the literature, religion, and philosophy of the Western world, beginning with the Greeks and Romans, continuing with the Hebrews, and ending with the emergence of Islam and the Christian West. The texts that we will examine represent some of the most important currents of Western thought prior to the modern age; we will examine them in their historical contexts, and explore the complex question of how the thought of the past interacts with that of the present. Among the issues that will recur in the semester will be: the nature of divinity, the connection between spiritual beliefs and the material means through which they are expressed, the distinction between law and justice, the conflict between tradition and innovation, and the historical evolution of gender roles. Our starting point will be the realization that the Western tradition is not a unified, easily-described body of permanent truths, but a multi-faceted, heavily-contested, and historically-mutable body of provisional positions. The conduct of the course will center on class discussions, and it will work (or fail) based on your willingness to engage with the issues and texts before us. In addition, students will attend a series of Monday evening common hours. These will consist of a variety of discussions, lectures, and films designed to complement the class sessions. One or more field trips will be part of the common experience of the class as well. An introduction to the different modes of university-level writing will be woven into the writing assignments in the course, and we will try as much as possible to break-down the idea that form can ever be separated from content. Book List: Required: Homer, The Iliad, trans. Robert Fagles, Penguin Homer, Odyssey, trans. Robert Fitzgerald, Farrar Strauss Giroux The Bible, NRSV the annotated edition in the Bookstore is best, but any NSRV will do Sophocles, Antigone, trans. Meineck and Woodruff, Hackett Plato, Symposium, trans. Nehemas and Woodruff, Hackett Plato, The Trial and Death of Socrates, trans. Grube and Cooper, Hackett Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, trans. C. D. C. Reeve, Hackett Virgil, The Aeneid, trans. Fitzgerald, Vintage Books St. Augustine of Hippo, Confessions, trans. Henry Chadwick, Oxford Dante, Vita Nuova, ed. and trans. Mark Musa, Oxford Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, trans. Winny, Broadview

Gordon Harvey, Writing with Sources A Guide for Students, Hackett Anthony Weston, A Rulebook for Arguments, 3 rd edition, Hackett E-Reserves or photocopies: Ovid, Amores Eric Auerbach, Odysseus Scar from Mimesis Walter Burkert, Introduction to Babylon Memphis Persepolis Soren Kierkegaard, extract from Fear and Trembling Selected artworks and architectural plans Robin Osborne, selections from Greece in the Making Reserve Books: Peter Toohey, Reading Epic W. A. Camps, An Introduction to Homer Simon Goldhill, Reading Greek Tragedy Charles Rowan Beye, Ancient Greek Literature and Society Jean-Pierre Vernant, Myth and Society in Ancient Greece ---, The Origins of Greek Thought W. A. Camps, An Introduction to Virgil s Aeneid Gian Biagio Conte, The Rhetoric of Imitation Peter Brown, Augustine of Hippo ---, Authority and the Sacred Reference Books: The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature (PA31.H69 1995) - a good quick reference to practically everything in the classical texts on the course The Oxford Companion to the Bible (BS440.M434 1993) - same as above, but for the Bible The Oxford Classical Dictionary (DE5. O9 1996) - useful for broader background information Reliable Web Sites: Classical Studies Perseus is an amazing collection of searchable texts, images, sites, secondary resources on the ancient world (and a few other topics): http//:www.perseus.tufts.edu (hint: the mirror sites are often faster than the main site -- it has a lot of webtraffic). Stoa.org is probably the 2nd best classics site out there, with articles, bibliographies, images, virtual tours: http://www.stoa.org/ Diotima is a collection of resources (bibliographies, articles, links, etc.) on women and gender in the ancient world: http://www.stoa.org/diotima/ William Johnson at UCincinnati provides a useful collection of resources (summaries, background, etc.) on Greek Tragedy: http://classics.uc.edu/~johnson/tragedy/ Virgil.org provides bibliography, texts, maps, links etc. on Virgil: http://virgil.org/

VRoma (virtual Rome) is a site developed by Latin teachers with a collection of images, and other resources: http://vroma.org/ The Bucknell Classics Department also has a large collection of links to sites on all s of aspects of the ancient world: http://www.bucknell.edu/classics/resources.html#weblinks Jack Lynch at Rutgers has a more succinct, annotated collection of links on Classical literature (including the Bible & Augustine): http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/lit/classic.html Vergil Bible and Augustine http://vergil.classics.upenn.edu/home/ http://virgil.org/ Resource Pages for Biblical Studies provides links to all aspects of the Bible, from texts and commentaries to scholarship and broader background on the ancient Mediterranean world: http://www.torreys.org/bible/ Augustine of Hippo provides images, texts, and other background resources: http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/augustine.html Help with writing Assignments: http://www.utoronto.ca/writing/advise.html http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/writing/ http://nutsandbolts.washcoll.edu/ Journals (40%) Seven times this semester you will be required to write a 2-3 page journal on the readings for that week, using topics that I will assign. This journal will be collected at the beginning the class in which it is due. The purpose of the journals is for you to directly engage with some aspect of the text under discussion and with a particular problem in college writing in general, so use of secondary sources (except for reference works) is prohibited. We will talk more about how a journal differs from an essay in class. Essays (40%) Two 5-7 page papers on topics that I will assign. The first paper will be graded in two stages, once on a first draft that you submit and again on the final draft when you resubmit it. The second will have an optional rewriting portion Class Participation (20%) the goal of this course is to help you to acquire a set of skills, as well as to give you access to a body of knowledge. Given this, it can only work properly when everyone participates as much as possible. No course of lectures can tell you how to read and write about a given subject; you ve got to try it for yourself and talk about your efforts with others in class and elsewhere. The more you do of this, the better you will get at it. The class participation mark will be awarded based on how much you contribute to our collective attempt to come to grips with the course material: this does not necessarily mean talking a lot, but rather being prepared every class and willing to enter into debates. Those who are shy or just don t talk a lot in class, be warned now: I have no compunction about calling on people. Being comfortable speaking in front of others is a life skill. Attendance will not be taken, but you cannot participate while being absent. Contractual Obligations:

All late assignments will be penalized at a rate of one grade unit per day (i.e. a B becomes a B- and so forth). Technological excuses for lateness ( My printer cartridge ran out... ; My roommate borrowed my laptop for the week-end... ; My dog ate my hard drive... etc.) will not be accepted, so please don t try them. Use your creative energy on your writing instead, and try to spare yourself the anguish caused by the last-minute-hellride method of essay composition. Late journals will not be accepted at all unless you have a medical or universityactivity related reason. Extensions for the essays will be readily granted, provided that you ask me at least a week in advance. After that point, they will be granted very selectively, usually only for medical reasons. A word on plagiarism: I expect you all to know what plagiarism is in all of its various forms. If I detect it, you will get my best effort to have you kicked out of the university. Please do not be tempted by the many essayproviders on the Net: I know where they are too, we have access to detection software, and the wares they peddle are usually the products of the various paper-swapping arrangements that exist within fraternities (i.e. they are stupid, as well as unethical). If you are not sure about what does and does not constitute plagiarism, PLEASE come and talk to me I will be happy to explain it to you. Schedule: Week One. August 25. The End of Violence and the Escape from the Past: Epic and Covenant For beauty dies of beauty, worth of worth, And ancient lineaments are blotted out. Irrational streams of blood are staining earth; Empedocles has thrown all things about; Hector is dead and there s a light in Troy; We that look on but laugh in tragic joy W. B. Yeats, The Gyres (1938) R: Introduction to Homer; essays by Osborne and Burkert Week Two. August 30 and September 1. T: Iliad 1, 6, 9, 12 R: Iliad 16, 18, 22, 24. FIRST JOURNAL DUE. Week Three. September 6 and 8. T: Odyssey 1-6 R: Odyssey 7-12. SECOND JOURNAL DUE Week Four. September 13 and 15. T: Odyssey 13-18 R: Odyssey 19-24 Week Five. September 20 and 22. T: Introduction to Hebrew Bible; Auerbach, Odysseus Scar Genesis 1-17. THIRD JOURNAL DUE. R: Genesis 18-50 F: FIRST DRAFT OF FIRST ESSAY DUE

Week Six. September 27 and 29. Drama and Philosophy in Classical Greece Greek society was founded upon slavery, and had, therefore, for its natural basis, the inequality of men... The brilliancy of Aristotle s genius is shown by this alone, that he discovered, in the expression of the value of commodities, a relation of equality. The peculiar conditions of the society in which he lived, alone prevented him from discovering what, in truth, was at the bottom of this equality. Karl Marx, Capital T: Introduction to Classical Greek Culture; Sophocles, Antigone R: Antigone F: FINAL DRAFT OF FIRST ESSAY DUE Week Seven. October 4 and 6. T: Plato, Symposium R: Plato, Symposium; Trial and Death of Socrates. FOURTH JOURNAL DUE. Week Eight. October 11 and 13. T: FALL BREAK R: Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics Week Nine. October 18 and 20. T: Aristotle, Nichomachean Ethics The Gods, the Emperor, and the State: Roman Culture and its Discontents Once life was rude and plain; now golden-paved, Rome holds the treasures of a world enslaved. Ovid, Ars amatoria ( Art of Love ) (c. 1 CE) R: Introduction to Roman culture; Ovid, Amores (selections) Week Ten. October 25 and 27. T: Vergil, Aeneid 1-4. FIFTH JOURNAL DUE. R: Aeneid 6-8 Week Eleven. November 1and 3. T: Aeneid 10 and 12 R: Introduction the New Testament; Gospel of John Week Twelve. November 8 and 10. T: Gospel of John R: Paul s Epistle to the Romans. SIXTH JOURNAL DUE. Week Thirteen. November 15 and 17. T: Augustine, Confessions (selections) R: Augustine, Confessions

F: SECOND ESSAY DUE The Carnal and the Spiritual in Medieval Culture Whoever thinks that in this mortal life a man may so disperse the mists of bodily and carnal imaginings as to possess the unclouded light of changeless truth, and to cleave to it with the unswerving constancy of a spirit wholly estranged from the common ways of life he understands neither what he seeks, nor who he is who seeks it. St. Augustine, On the Harmony of the Evangelists (c. 400 CE) Week Fourteen. November 22 and 24. T: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight R: THANKSGIVING Week Fifteen. November 29 and December 1. T: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight R: Dante, Vita Nuova. SEVENTH JOURNAL DUE Week Sixteen. December 6. T: Dante, Vita Nuova and Course conclusion. R: OPTIONAL REWRITE OF SECOND ESSAY DUE.