
Classics
[For more information about major requirements, see Classical and Romance
Languages and Literature]
Short Term 2000 Classics Addendum
Notes
The classical heritage is a cornerstone of Western civilization; it can be studied in many ways, both
as a culture generally and directly through its languages and literatures. Students in every discipline
can benefit from exposure to the great ideas and artifacts of the Greek and Roman civilizations.
Without requiring familiarity with the ancient languages, courses in classics afford a broad basis
for the knowledge of these two ancient cultures. Students may elect to complete an interdisciplinary
major in Classical and Medieval Studies. See page 110 for a description of this program.
100. Introduction to the Ancient World. This course introduces the Greco-Roman world, and
serves as a useful basis for 200- and 300-level classes in classical civilization. Within a general
chronological framework students consider the ancient world under a series of headings: religion,
philosophy, art, education, literature, social life, politics, and law. The survey begins with Bronze
Age Crete and Mycenae and ends in the first century B.C.E., as Rome makes its presence felt in
the Mediterranean and moves toward empire. This course is the same as History 100. D.
O'Higgins.
160. Tragedy and the Athenian City. How did Greek tragedy fit into the city life of ancient Athens?
In this course, a thematic unit on cultic ritual deals with initiation, marriage and funerary rites,
human sacrifice, and conflict between religious and secular authorities. A second unit on
construction and depiction of gender introduces such topics as gender relations and the politics of
marriage; the stereotype of Greek women as wild, defiant, and irrational; male fear of the feminine
and misguided attempts to control it; and manifestations of the wrath of Aphrodite in madness and
suicide. A third unit on civic discourse considers tragedy as a mode of critique of contemporary
issues such as democracy and imperialism, legitimacy of children, and social function of the idea
of native origin (autochthony) in myth. A fourth unit on ancient analysis of tragedy compares how
the ancient critics thought about the above subjects. Staff.
170. Introduction to Latin Literature. This introductory survey of classical Latin literature in
translation extends from the earliest writings in Latin to the authors of early imperial Rome.
Students read and analyze selections from Roman comedy, tragedy, epic, lyric, letters, and satire.
They also read modern scholarship on the works and learn about the world in which they were
written. This course is the same as Classical and Medieval Studies 170. D. O'Higgins.
200. Ancient Comedy and Satire. Students read (in translation) the comic poets and satirists of
Greece and Rome and investigate the nature and social context of ancient humor, satire, and
invective. Authors to be read include Homer, Hesiod, Archilochus, Semonides, Aristophanes,
Menander, Terence, Horace, Seneca, and Petronius. Recommended background: Classics 100.
Open to first-year students. D. O'Higgins.
201. Women in Antiquity. This course looks at women in ancient Greece and Rome, their image in
men's art and literature and (in rare cases) in their own, their status under various law codes, their
perceived powers and weaknesses, and their role in public and private life. The course also
examines female cults and divinities, and myths of rebellion, transsexuality, matriarchies, and
monsters. Students read ancient texts (in English translation) and modern works of scholarship on
the subject. Recommended background: Classics 100 (or other classics courses). Open to first-year
students. Enrollment limited to 35. D. O'Higgins.
202. Greek Tragedy. This course introduces students to fifth-century Athenian tragedies (in
English translation). The plays form the primary focus of the course, but there are many related
topics of discussion: the origin of tragedy and its religious significance, its political context and
content, tragedy's audience and affective power, tragedy's self-conscious relationship with epic
and lyric. Students also read and discuss a representative selection of modern criticism on Greek
tragedy. Open to first-year students. D. O'Higgins.
301. Explorations in Greek Prose. This course introduces the student to prose literature in the
original Greek, and it assumes a reading knowledge of the language. The course focuses on one of
the major genres of Greek prose: historiography, philosophy, law court rhetoric, or political
writing. It examines the style and rhetorical ploys of the writers, and heightens the student's
awareness of the use and abuse of public discourse. It also includes class presentations and
discussions on the social and political outlook of these writers, who created the imaginary past and
political ideology of every democracy since that time. Prerequisite(s): Greek 201 or 202. This
course is the same as Greek 301. D. O'Higgins.
302. Seminar: Topics in Classics. Topics courses require intensive reading and discussion of a
single author or genre. Topics vary from year to year. Enrollment limited to 15. Staff.
305. Africa and the Classics. The field of classics, long seen as fundamental to and defining the
culture of the Western world, recently has begun to examine its own definitions, canons, and
presumptions. One of the most controversial areas of this self-reflective research is that of race and
the role that race has played in our definitions of cultural heritage. This course examines the
cultures of ancient Egypt and Nubia and how the ancient Greeks and Romans viewed the African
civilizations with which they came in contact. In the last part of the semester students read and
discuss M. Bernal's Black Athena (among other things) and consider how the modern study of
classics has been shaped. Recommended background: previous courses in Greek or Roman
antiquity, the ancient Mediterranean, historiography. Enrollment limited to 20. Written permission
of the instructor is required. D. O'Higgins.
360. Independent Study. Independent study of individually selected topics. Periodic conferences
and papers are required. Permission of the department is required. Students are limited to one
independent study per semester. Staff.
365. Special Topics. Designed for the small seminar group of students who may have particular
interests in areas of study that go beyond the regular course offerings. Periodic conferences and
papers are required. Written permission of the instructor is required. Staff.
Short Term Units
s20. Readings in the Odyssey of Homer. The Odyssey had proved an inspiring and
inexhaustible text over the centuries. This unit explores the poem in detail, examining its cultural
and literary context and considering modern approaches to this most enigmatic text. The unit is
taught in English, but students who have completed one or more years of ancient Greek are encouraged
to read sections in Greek, and learn how to "perform" the poetry. Recommended background:
Classics 100. Written permission of the instructor is required, with priority given to students of
Greek. Enrollment is limited to 15. This unit is the same as Greek s20. D. O'Higgins.
s21. Readings in Latin Epic. This unit introduces students to two major Latin epics: Vergil,
Aeneid, and Lucan, Pharsalia. These poems span a critical century during which Rome moved
from republic to empire. Taken together, they provide insights into sharply changing views of the
Roman state and of the poet's function within it. Students read both poems, together with relevant
modern scholarship. The unit is taught in English, but a section of reading (and performance) in
Latin is available to students with one or more years of Latin. This unit is the same as Latin s21.
Enrollment limited to 15. D. O'Higgins.
s22. Lights, Cameras, Centurions: Hollywood's Imagined Rome. This unit proposes the
hypothesis that Hollywood's fascination with Roman epics is linked, at least in part, to the "Red
Scare" of the 1950s and government inquiries about and witchhunts against alleged communists
active in the American government, academe, and the entertainment industry. Students watch five
films (including Spartacus, Ben-Hur, and The Robe), from the period and read the novels on
which they were based. Students also read secondary material on the House Committee on
Un-American Activities and the "Hollywood Ten," in order to consider the question: Why did
American filmmakers in the 1950s choose to imagine and speak about contemporary politics with
the metaphors of the Roman world? This unit is the same as Classical and Medieval Studies s22.
Open to first-year students. M. Imber.
s23. Fighting Monsters: Gladiators, Slaves, and Emperors in Imperial Rome. The Roman
gladiatorial games were extremely popular for hundreds of years. This unit studies the games from
a variety of perspectives to explain their enduring appeal to ancient and modern audiences. The
gladiators themselves and their status in Roman society, and the ways in which gladiators seem
simultaneously monstrous and heroic, are central topics. Other topics include slavery in Roman
society (since most of the gladiators were slaves); how the gladiators both exemplify and defy their
status as slaves; and the spectacle of imperial cruelty (with a focus on the personal lives of
emperors who at once declared themselves to be gods and yet perpetrated unfathomable acts of
all-too-human savagery). This unit is the same as Classical and Medieval Studies s23. Open to
first-year students. Staff.
s25. Roman Law. Modern America's obsession with the law, demonstrated most recently by
public response to the O.J. Simpson, Unabomber, and Oklahoma City bombing trials, can be
traced back two millennia to ancient Rome. The Romans had their celebrity lawyers, "trials of the
century," and professional legal pundits, just as we do. In this unit, students learn how to think
like a Roman lawyer, by studying the Roman law of delict (a branch of the law analogous to both
modern criminal and tort law), using the American law school "case book" method of analysis. In
addition students explore the role of law in Roman culture and the practice of law as an activity in
ancient Rome. Recommended background: Classics/History 100. This unit is the same as Classical
and Medieval Studies s25. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 30. M. Imber.
s50. Individual Research. Registration in this unit is granted by the department only after the
student has submitted a written proposal for a full-time research project to be completed during the
Short Term and has secured the sponsorship of a member of the department to direct the study and
evaluate results. Students are limited to one individual research unit. Staff.
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