XII. Course Descriptions
Classical Studies
School of Languages and Literatures.
Unless otherwise noted, these courses do not require a knowledge of the Greek or Latin languages.
CLAS*2000 Classical Mythology W (3-0) [0.50]
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An examination of the nature and function of myth in Classical Antiquity. The course shows how the narrative and symbolic structure of myths orders individual and communal experience. The myths that have influenced Western civilization receive special emphasis. |
CLAS*2150 Western Art: Greece F (3-0) [0.50]
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A survey of Ancient Greek Art and Archaeology, with stress on form and function plus stylistic trends and aesthetic values. The course will illuminate the cultural, social, and political life in Ancient Greece. (Also listed as ARTH*2150). |
CLAS*2350 The Classical Tradition W (3-0) [0.50]
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This course examines the transmission of Graeco-Roman culture in circumstances radically different from those in which it originated. It highlights the aspects of classical culture most influential in forming the Western tradition. (Offered in odd-numbered years.) |
Prerequisite(s): |
CLAS*1000 or CLAS*2000
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CLAS*3030 Epic Heroes and Poems W (3-0) [0.50]
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The nature and significance of the epic hero. Epic as code and as critique of tradition. Oral poetry, and critical problems raised by it. The central texts are The Iliad, The Odyssey, and Virgil's Aeneid; other poems are also studied. (Offered in odd-numbered years.) |
Prerequisite(s): |
CLAS*1000 or CLAS*2000
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CLAS*3080 Epic Heroes and Poems (in Greek) W (6-0) [1.00]
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This course augments CLAS*3030 for Classical Languages students through the reading in Greek of selected books from the Iliad and/or Odyssey. The course will include close study of the epic dialect and features of its formulaic language.(Offered in odd-numbered years.) |
Prerequisite(s): |
GREK*2020
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Restriction(s): |
Registration in Classical Languages. |
CLAS*3100 Religion in Greece and Rome F (3-0) [0.50]
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An examination of the varieties of religious experience and of religious activity in Greece and Rome, before the establishment of Christianity. Particular attention is paid both to the relations of religion to state and to the relations of the individual to gods. (Offered in even-numbered years.) |
Prerequisite(s): |
CLAS*1000 or CLAS*2000
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CLAS*3150 Space: Roman Art and Urbanism W (3-0) [0.50]
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Introduction to Roman art and urbanism from the Early Republic to the end of the imperial period. The course will survey the developments of Roman art with an emphasis on architecture, sculpture and painting. It will illuminate the development of the urban space in the context of cultural, social and political life. (Also listed as ARTH*3150). (Offered in even-numbered years.) |
Equate(s): |
ARTH*3150
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CLAS*3750 Greek Myth in the Western Tradition F (3-0) [0.50]
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This course will study the functions of Greek myths in the non-Greek cultures which adopted them and so transmitted them to the later general culture of the West. The period to be explored extends from Augustan Rome through the European Middle Ages to the Early Renaissance in Italy. (Offered in even-numbered years.) |
Prerequisite(s): |
CLAS*2000
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CLAS*4000 Novel and Romance in Antiquity F (3-0) [0.50]
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The historical and formal roots of fiction in the classical prose romances. Special attention is paid to the influence of myth, religion, historiography and ethical biography. Among texts studied are Daphnis and Chloe, Satyricon, and Aithiopika. (Offered in odd-numbered years.) |
Prerequisite(s): |
CLAS*3030 or CLAS*3040
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CLAS*4150 Research Paper in Classics F,W (3-0) [0.50]
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This course is intended to complement courses in specified studies in classics. It engages the student in research and in critical writing, and permits the examination, in depth, of a topic of importance to the discipline and of interest to the student. |
Prerequisite(s): |
1.50 credits in Classical Studies courses at the 3000 level |
CLAS*4400 Seminar in Classics W (3-0) [0.50]
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A seminar course complementing courses of specific study in classics. It seeks to define the nature of the discipline, its values and its procedures. Attention will be paid to recent methodological and ideological trends in the discipline. |
Prerequisite(s): |
1.50 credits in Classical Studies at the 3000 level |
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