Classics
The following courses have no prerequisite, require no knowledge
of Greek or Latin, and may not be taken to fulfill language requirements.
CLAS 201 - (3) (Y)
Greek Civilization
Studies Greek history, literature, and art.
CLAS 202 - (3) (Y)
Roman Civilization
Studies Roman history, literature, and art.
CLAS 204 - (3) (Y)
Greek Mythology
Introduces major themes of Greek mythological thought; surveys myths
about the olympic pantheon and the legends of the heroes.
CLAS 304 - (3) (E)
Gender in Antiquity
Studies ancient views of gender and sexuality in ancient society.
CLAS 310 - (3) (E)
Age of Odysseus
Studies the literature, culture, history, art, and religion of the
times of the Homeric epics (Bronze Age to circa 700 B.C.). Readings
include Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, The Homeric Hymns, and Hesiod's
Theogony and Works and Days. Some emphasis on the archaeology of
Mycenaean sites.
CLAS 311 - (3) (E)
Age of Pericles
Studies the literature, art, architecture, history, and politics
of the Periclean Age of Athens, with special emphasis on Pericles
(circa 495-429 B.C.) and his accomplishments. Readings from Aeschylus,
Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Thucydides, and Plutarch.
CLAS 312 - (3) (E)
Age of Alexander
Studies the times, person, accomplishments of Alexander the Great
(356-323 B.C.), the literature, art, and architecture of the period,
and the influence of Alexander on the development of Greek and Western
culture. Readings from Plutarch, Arrian, Demosthenes, and poets
and philosophers of the early Hellenistic period.
CLAS 313 - (3) (E)
Age of Augustus
Studies the times, person, and accomplishments of the Roman Emperor
Augustus (63 B.C.-14 A.D.), with special emphasis on the literature,
art, architecture, and political developments of the period. Readings
from Tacitus, Suetonius, and the poetry of Vergil, Horace, and Ovid.
CLAS 314 - (3) (E)
Age of Augustine
Studies cultural developments in the fourth and fifth centuries,
centering on St. Augustine and the literature of the period. Readings
from such works as Augustine's Confessions and City of God, Jerome's
letters, Cassian's Conversations, Sulpicius Severus' biography of
St. Martin, and the poetry of Claudian and Prudentius.
CLAS 321 - (3) (Y)
Tragedy and Comedy
Analyzes readings in the tragic poets Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides,
and Seneca; and the comic poets Aristophanes, Menander, Plautus,
and Terence, together with ancient and modern discussions.
Greek
GREE 101, 102 - (8) (Y)
Elementary Greek
Attic Greek: beginning grammar, composition, and selected readings.
GREE 201 - (3) (Y)
Intermediate Greek I
Prerequisite: GREE 101-102.
Xenophon and Plato
GREE 202 - (3) (Y)
Intermediate Greek II
Prerequisite: GREE 201.
Herodotus and Euripides
GREE 223 - (3) (Y)
The New Testament I
Prerequisite: GREE 101-102.
Introduces New Testament Greek; selections from the Gospels.
GREE 224 - (3) (Y)
The New Testament II
Prerequisite: GREE 201 or GREE 223.
Selections from the Epistles.
GREE 301 - (3) (O)
Advanced Reading in Greek
Prerequisite: GREE 202.
Reading of a tragedy and a related prose work. Weekly exercises
in writing Greek.
GREE 302 - (3) (O)
Advanced Reading in Greek
Prerequisite: GREE 301 or 303.
Readings in Greek from Homer's Iliad.
GREE 303 - (3) (E)
Advanced Reading in Greek
Prerequisite: GREE 202.
Reading of a comedy and a related prose work. Weekly exercises in
writing Greek.
GREE 304 - (3) (E)
Advanced Reading in Greek
Prerequisite: GREE 301 or 303.
Readings in Greek from Homer's Odyssey. Offered in alternate years.
GREE 503 - (3) (SI)
Classical Greek Prose
Selections illustrating the development of prose style in the fifth
and fourth centuries, B.C.
GREE 504 - (3) (SI)
Later Greek Prose
Selections from Greek authors, illustrating the development of prose
style from the third century, B.C., to the second century, A.D.
GREE 508 - (3) (SI)
Greek Epigraphy
Studies the inscriptions of the ancient Greeks.
GREE 509 - (3) (SI)
Prose Composition
Translation from English into Greek.
GREE 510 - (3) (SI)
Homer
Studies various Homeric problems with readings from Homeric epics.
GREE 511 - (3) (SI)
Hesiod
Studies the Works and Days and Theogony, and their place in the
literary tradition.
GREE 512 - (3) (SI)
Greek Lyric Poetry
Surveys Greek lyric forms from earliest times.
GREE 513 - (3) (SI)
Pindar
Selections from the Odes; studies the development of the choral
lyric in Greek Poetry.
GREE 514 - (3) (SI)
Aeschylus' Oresteia
Reading and discussion of Aeschylus' Agamemnon, Choephoroi, and
Eumenides.
GREE 515 - (3) (SI)
Sophocles
Selected plays of Sophocles with studies of their dramatic techniques.
GREE 516 - (3) (SI)
Herodotus
Readings in the Histories.
GREE 517 - (3) (SI)
Euripides
Reading of selected plays, with study of the poetic and dramatic
technique.
GREE 518 - (3) (SI)
Thucydides
Studies selections from the History of the Peloponnesian War, with
attention to the development of Greek historical prose style and
the historical monograph.
GREE 519 - (3) (SI)
Aristophanes
Readings from selected plays of Aristophanes, with close examination
of the history and development of Greek Old Comedy.
GREE 520 - (3) (SI)
New Comedy
Readings from the Dyscolus and other substantial fragments; discussion
of New Comedy, its origins, and its legacy.
GREE 521 - (3) (SI)
Plato
Readings from selected dialogues of Plato; studies Plato's philosophy
and literary style.
GREE 522 - (3) (SI)
Aristotle
Reading and discussion of the Nicomachean Ethics.
GREE 523 - (3) (SI)
Hellenistic Poetry
Readings in the poets of the Hellenistic period.
Latin
LATI 101, 102 - (4) (Y)
Elementary Latin
Beginning grammar, prose composition, and simple Latin readings.
LATI 103 - (4) (Y)
Fundamentals of Latin (Intensive)
Prerequisite: Two or more years of high school Latin and appropriate
CEEB score, or permission of the Director of Undergraduate Studies.
Covers the material of 101,102 in one semester. Intended principally
as a review for those who know some Latin. May be taken as a rapid
introduction to Latin.
LATI 201 - (3) (Y)
Intermediate Latin I
Prerequisite: LATI 102, 103, or appropriate CEEB score.
Introductory readings from Caesar and Ovid.
LATI 202 - (3) (Y)
Intermediate Latin II
Prerequisite: LATI 201.
Introductory readings from Cicero and Catullus.
LATI 301 - (3) (IR)
Plautus
Reading of two plays of Plautus with attention to style and dramaturgy.
LATI 302 - (3) (IR)
Catullus
Selections from Carmina.
Note The prerequisite for LATI 303 through LATI
311 is LATI 202, four years of high school Latin, or appropriate
SAT score.
LATI 303 - (3) (IR)
Cicero
Selections from Cicero's speeches, philosophical works, and letters.
LATI 304 - (3) (IR)
Prose Composition
Graded exercises in translation from English into Latin, with some
attention to the reverse process.
LATI 305 - (3) (IR)
The Satirical Writing of Petronius and Seneca
Petronius' Cena Trimalchionis, and Seneca's Apocolocyntosis.
LATI 307 - (3) (IR)
Livy
Selections from Livy's History.
LATI 308 - (3) (IR)
Horace
Selections from Horace's Satires, Epodes, Odes, and Epistles.
LATI 309 - (3) (IR)
Introduction to Mediaeval Latin
Selections of Mediaeval Latin prose and verse.
LATI 310 - (3) (IR)
Vergil
Selections from Vergil's Aeneid.
LATI 311 - (3) (IR)
Ovid
Selections from either the narrative poems (Metamorphoses, Fasti)
or from the amatory poems.
LATI 501 - (3) (SI)
History of Republican Latin Literature
Lectures with readings of important works of the period.
LATI 502 - (3) (SI)
History of Latin Literature of the Empire
Lectures with readings of important works of the period.
LATI 503 - (3) (SI)
History of Medieval Latin Literature
Study of medieval Latin literature from Boethius to Dante.
LATI 504 - (3) (SI)
Prose Composition
LATI 505 - (3) (SI)
Latin Paleography
Studies scripts and book production from antiquity to the Renaissance.
LATI 506 - (3) (SI)
Roman Comedy
Selected plays of Plautus and Terence.
LATI 507 - (3) (SI)
Latin Elegy
Studies selections from Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid.
LATI 508 - (3) (SI)
Roman Satire
Studies the satiric fragments from the Roman Republic and Horace's
Sermones; the origins of Roman Satire.
LATI 509 - (3) (SI)
Roman Literary Criticism
Studies Roman literary theory, with readings from the Rhetorica
ad Herrenium, Cicero's works on the principles of oratory, Horace's
Ars Poetica, and Quintilian.
LATI 510 - (3) (SI)
Lucretius
Studies selections from Lucretius' De Rerum Natura; the development
of Roman Eipcureanism.
LATI 511 - (3) (SI)
Catullus
Studies the surviving poems of Catullus, with particular attention
to questions of genre, structure, and literary history.
LATI 512 - (3) (SI)
Julius Caesar
Studies either the Bellum Gallicum or the Bellum Civile, both as
literary monuments and as first-hand accounts of major events in
the last years of the Roman Republic.
LATI 513 - (3) (SI)
Cicero's Philosophical Works
Focuses on either the ethical and epistomological or the theological
or political treatises.
LATI 514 - (3) (SI)
Cicero's Rhetorical Works
Readings from the orations and the rhetorical treatises.
LATI 515 - (3) (SI)
Sallust
Studies the historical monographs Catilina and Jurgurtha in their
literary and historical setting, with attention to the remains of
the Histories and other contemporary documents.
LATI 516 - (3) (SI)
Vergil's Aeneid
LATI 517 - (3) (SI)
Vergil's Eclogues and Georgics
LATI 518 - (3) (SI)
Horace's Odes
LATI 519 - (3) (SI)
Livy
Selected readings from the Ab urbe condita.
LATI 520 - (3) (SI)
Ovid's Metamorphoses
LATI 521 - (3) (SI)
Ovid's Love Poetry
Readings from the Amores, Heroides, Ars Amatoria, and Remedia Amoris.
LATI 522 - (3) (SI)
Tacitus Selections from Tacitus.
LATI 523 - (3) (SI)
Petronius
Studies Petronius' Satyricon and the development of fiction-writing
in classical antiquity.
LATI 524 - (3) (SI)
Juvenal
Studies the satires of Juvenal and the development of satire among
the Romans.
LATI 525 - (6) (SI)
Seneca's Philosophical Works
Studies selected philosophical texts of Seneca, chiefly the Epistulae
Morales and the nature and development of Roman Stoicism.
LATI 526 - (3) (SI)
Latin Epic After Vergil
Readings from Lucan, Statius, and Silius Italicus.
LATI 527 - (3) (SI)
Apuleius' Metamorphoses
Reading of the text; the influence of the work on subsequent literature
and art.
LATI 528 - (3) (SI)
Christian Latin Writings of the Roman Empire
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