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Classical
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last updated: 8/17/06
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Classes
Fall 2006
Latin
Greek
Hebrew
Classical Studies
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The Greek comic poet Menander
(fresco from the House of Menander in Pompeii)
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Latin
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Scene from a Roman comedy
(Mosaic, 3rd century CE, Museum Sousse, Tunisia,
photo: Hans
Zimmermann, Goerlitz )
Latin 131-01: Elementary Latin I (1) (Knorr)
MWF 10:20am-11:20am, ETN 311
Latin 131-02: Elementary Latin I (1) (Nice)
MWF 1:50pm-2:50pm, CLN 102
(Syllabus)
(Answer
Sheets) (Mock
Final)
Introduction to the language and culture of the ancient Romans.
The course emphasizes the fast development of basic reading skills.
Students will read three hit comedies by T. Maccius Plautus
(ca. 254-184 BCE), Aulularia, Bacchides, and Amphitruo,
in gradually less simplified versions.
Textbooks (also used
for LATIN 132 in Spring 2007):
P. V. Jones and K. C. Sidwell, Reading Latin, vol.
1: Text, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1986, ISBN 0-521-28623-9, $19.00.
P. V. Jones and K. C. Sidwell, Reading Latin, vol.
2: Grammar, Vocabulary and Exercises,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986, ISBN 0-521-28622-0,
$30.00.
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1772 Spanish-Latin bilingual edition
of Sallust's Bellum Catilinae
by Spanish master printer JOAQUÍN IBARRA Y MARÍN (1725-1785).
For more information, click here.
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Latin 231: Latin Prose: Sallust, Bellum
Catilinae (1) (Nice)
MWF 10:20am-11:20am, ETN 108
In his Bellum Catilinae, C. Sallustius Crispus (86-35/34
B.C.E.) recounts the dramatic events of the year 63 B.C.E. In this
year, a patrician nobleman, L. Sergius Catilina, after two
electoral defeats, made himself the leader of a group of heavily
indebted young aristocrats and the Roman poor and tried to kill
Cicero, his successful rival at the polls, and overthrow
the goverment.
With his trademark archaizing style, Sallust skillfully captures
the drama of the times, including an early morning raid at some
of the conspirators and the emotionally charged debate in which
Caesar and Cato the Younger fight over the lives of
the arrested conspirators. Prerequisites: Latin 132.
Required Texts:
HANDFORD, S.A. (1987) /Sallust. Jugurthine War. Conspiracy of
Catiline/./ /Penguin, Harmondsworth.
MCGUSHIN, P. (1980) /Sallust: Bellum Catilinae/. Bristol.
Recommended Secondary Reading:
EARL, D.C. (1961) /The Political Thought of Sallust/. Cambridge.
SYME, R. (1964) /Sallust/. Oxford.
WARNER, R. (1972) /Plutarch, Fall of the Roman Republic/. Penguin,
Harmondsworth (/Lives of Crassus, Caesar, Cicero/)
WILKINS, A.T. (1994) /Hero or Villain: Sallusts Portrayal
of Catiline/.
Peter Lang, New York.
Optional Texts:
MACDONALD, C. (1977) /Cicero. In Catilinam I-IV, Pro Murena etc.
Loeb Classical Series
ROLFE, J.C. (1920) /Sallust./ Loeb Classical Series. Camb. Mass.
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Lucretius, De Rerum Natura 2.332-41,
as preserved in the 9th century fragmentum Gottorpiense (= codex
G).
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Latin 391: Advanced Readings in Latin Literature:
Lucretius and Cicero (1) (Bachvarova)
MWF 3:00-4:00pm, ETN 207
We will be examining the
Roman reaction to post-Platonic philosophy (Epicureanism and Stoicism),
especially in the works of Lucretius and Cicero. Among the topics
to be covered are the connection between physics and morality, ancient
theories of the evolution of man and civilization, rhetoric and
poetics, and how Greek philosophy was translated and transformed
by Roman intellectuals. The focus will be on in-class translation,
with some discussion of secondary sources and primary sources
in translation. Each student will give an oral presentation on a
topic of his/her own choosing. Prerequisite:
Latin 232 or equivalent, or permission of instructor.
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| Greek |
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Socrates (in
the basket) being ridiculed in Aristophanes' "Clouds".
Socrates is "walking the air" to investigate the sun,
his pale-faced students are exploring
what lies below the earth, while their behinds study "arse-stronomy".
Photo: Steven S. Tigner
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Greek 131 Elementary Ancient Greek I (1) (Knorr)
MWF 09:10am-10:10am, ETN 206
Using a textbook famed for its entertaining
dialogues, Reading Greek, this course offers an intensive
introduction to Classical Greek. About half-way into the first semester,
we will start to read large chunks of three famous comedies by Aristophanes,
the Clouds, the Birds, and the Wasps, and you
will get a good idea of daily life in ancient Greece.
Ancient Greek is the language of the first Western historians, Herodotus
and Thucydides, of philosophical giants such as Plato and Aristotle,
of theatrical geniuses such as Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides
on the tragic side, Aristophanes and Menander on the comic side.
Greek is also the language of the New Testament and many early Church
Fathers. Finally, science majors and pre-med students will find
that a lot of scientific and medical terminology is based on Greek
because the first Western scientists, mathematicians, and physicians
were all Greek. For that reason, this course is highly recommended
for students interested in literature, history, philosophy,
theater, religion, and science, plus everyone interested in doing
really well on the vocabulary part of the GRE exam required for
graduate school.
| Textbook (used
for the entire first year): |
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Joint Association of Classical Teachers.
Reading Greek: Text.
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Cambridge
University Press: 1979, ISBN:
0521219760, $22.99.
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Joint Association of Classical Teachers. |
Reading
Greek: Grammar, Vocabulary
and Exercises.
Cambridge
University Press: 1979,
ISBN: 0521219779, $29.99.
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Plato (ca. 427-347 BCE)
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Socrates (ca. 470-399 BCE)
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Greek 231 Ancient Greek Prose
(1): Plato, Apology (Bachvarova)
MWF 01:50pm-02:50pm, ETN 108
In the
last decades of fifth-century-BCE Athens, an adoring crowd of fashionable
young aristocrats, among them Plato, who later founded his own school
of philosophy, gathered around a humble stone mason by the name
of Socrates. In his patient search for truth and true wisdom, Socrates
interviewed men from all walks of life, civic leaders, craftsmen,
poets, and philosophers, but when he pressed them, he found that
none of them knew much to start with. Plato and the others got a
kick out of the way Socrates exposed the ignorance of their elders,
but Socrates, the self-appointed "gadfly" of Athens, was
finally put to trial and executed for "introducing new gods
and corrupting the youth." Socrates' radical philosophy and
subversive humor come best to life in Plato's deservedly famous
Apology of Socrates that will be the focus of this class.
Prerequisites: Greek 131 and 132 or equivalent.
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Textbooks:
Plato, Apology,
ed. by Gilbert P. Rose,
2 vols.
Bryn
Mawr Commentaries, 1989,
ISBN: 0-929524-56-X,
$ 10.95
Herbert Weir Smyth,
Greek Grammar, revised by Gordon M. Messing,
Harvard
U Press, 1990, ISBN:
0674362500, $42.00.
H. G. Liddell, R. Scott, An Intermediate Greek-English
Lexicon,
Oxford U Press, 1963, ISBN: 0199102066, $ 45.00.
Cool links:
The Last Days of
Socrates (lots of background material, incl. an annotated view
of 5th cent. Athens)
The Ancient
City of Athens (pictures of ancient monuments in Athens today)
Athenian
Litigation (links to websites and scholarly articles)
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| Hebrew
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Papyrus
fragment of the Torah
HEBR 231 Intermediate Classical Hebrew I
(1) (McCreery)
MWF 11:30-12:30, ETN 105
Readings and translation of selected passages from the Hebrew Bible
and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Some of the finer points of Hebrew grammar,
poetry, and ortho-graphy will be examined. Prerequisites: HEBR 131-132
(open to Freshmen with good Hebrew background).
For your preparation, check out the Library of Congress
exhibit
"SCROLLS
FROM THE DEAD SEA: The Ancient Library of Qumran and Modern Scholarship",
online at http://www.ibiblio.org/expo/deadsea.scrolls.exhibit/intro.html.
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Classes
in the Classical Studies Program
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The Funeral Games for Patroclus
(Homer, Iliad 23)
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ARTH 271 (IT,
4th Sem Lang Req: Greek) Greek Art
and Architecture (1)
(Nicgorski)
MWF 09:10am-10:10am, ART 212 Closed
This course explores the development of historical Greek sculpture,
painting, and architecture from its beginnings, ca. 1200 B.C.E., to
the end of the Hellenistic period (31 B.C.E.). Central themes include
the Greek interest in mythological narrative, and the pursuit of idealism,
naturalism, and ultimately, the expression of raw emotion. The classic
expressions of Greek architecture, in their stylistic unity and variety,
will also be studied, especially the way buildings serve different
functions with a very limited architectural language. The course will
address the role of archaeology in providing these artifacts with
physical contexts and chronologies that enhance our knowledge of the
material and our understanding of ancient Greek culture. Ancient literary
sources will also be examined in order to place this material in its
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HIST 251 Rome: From
Republic to Empire (1)
(Nice)
TTh 2:30pm-4:00pm, ETN 106
This course will examine the origins of Rome, the rise and fall
of
the Roman Republic, and the development of the Roman Empire. Within
this
political framework, close attention will be given to the socio-economic
factors that drove Romes quest for world power. The importance
of
Romes social and cultural customs and institutions (e.g. gender,
religion, slavery, entertainment) will help to shed light on the
nature
of Roman identity both for the inhabitants of the city and those
on the
peripheries of the Empire. In addition, through careful analysis
of both
primary and secondary sources, students will be encouraged to ground
their study of ancient Rome with an understanding of the theoretical
models and concepts relevant to ancient history and historiography.
Required Books:
BOATWRIGHT, M.T. GARGOLA, D.J., TALBERT, R.J.A. (2004) The Romans
from
Village to Empire. A History of Ancient Rome from Earliest
Times to
Constantine. Oxford University Press.
PLUTARCH, The Fall of the Roman Republic. Penguin.
PLUTARCH, Makers of Rome. Penguin.
SUETONIUS, Lives of the Twelve Caesars. Penguin.
TACITUS, The Annals of Imperial Rome. Penguin.
Recommended Books:
CRAWFORD, M. (1992) The Roman Republic. Fontana.
LIVY, The Early History of Rome, Penguin.
SCULLARD, H.H. (1982 5th ed.) From the Gracchi to Nero. Routledge.
STOCKTON, D. (1985) From the Gracchi to Sulla. Sources for Roman
History, 133-80 B.C. (LACTOR 13) London Association of Classical
Teachers. Out of print currently.
WELLS, C. (1995 2nd ed.) The Roman Empire. Harvard University
Press.
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from left to right: Thales (?), Socrates,
Plato, and Aristotle
PHIL 230 History of Philosophy: Ancient and
Medieval (1) (Goble) Closed
TTh 9:40am-11:10pm, ETN 110
Ancient and medieval philosophy from Thales through St. Thomas.
The important ideas of leading philosophers and the movements they
influenced. Emphasis is on metaphysics and the problems of knowledge.
(from the WU course catalog)
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REL 113 (TH) Introduction to the Old Testament/Hebrew
Bible (1) (McCreery)
MWF 9:10am-10:10am, ETN 110 Closed
An introduction to the history and literature
of ancient Israel and to modern methods used in studying the Old
Testament and the Apocrypha. The course has three basic aims: to
reconstruct the history of ancient Israel on the basis of archaeological
and form-critical methods, to survey the spectrum of literary forms
in the Old Testament, and to identify the major theological themes
and symbols used to express Israel's faith.
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Qumran cave 4 near the Dead Sea
where fragments of approximately 580 different
ancient manuscripts were discovered in 1954.
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REL 237 (W,
4th Sem Lang Req: Hebrew)
Introduction to Syro-Palestinian Archaeology (1) (McCreery)
W 06:30pm-09:30pm, ETN 110 Closed
An introduction to the
history and current directions of archaeological research in the
Holy Land, concentrating on modern Jordan, Israel, and Syria. Particular
emphasis will be placed on the relationship between archaeological
research and biblical studies. This course is a prerequisite
for REL 337 Archaeological Methodology. Writing-Centered.
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| Extracurricular Activities |
Classics
Club:
The Classics Club usually meets three to four times per semester.
Its meetings are open to anyone interested.
Fall 2006 events will include:
Film Series: Toga & Sandal Films every Wednesday
during the Fall semester from 7-10pm in ETN 209.
September 23: Visit to the Classic Greek Theatre of Oregon
perfomance of Euripides' "Orestes" in Portland. To RSVP,
send an email to Prof. Knorr.
Early December: Roman Potluck with real ancient recipes at
Prof. Knorr's house.
If you are interested in participating in any of these events or would
like to know more about the Classics Club, please email Prof.
Knorr. |
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ARCHAEOLOGICAL
INSTITUTE OF AMERICA, SALEM SOCIETY:
Every semester, the AIA offers three to four free lectures of interest
to Classics students. This semester, we are also hosting a major international
conference on cultural heritage issues from Oct. 12-14, 2006.
Attendance is free for Willamette students and AIA members.
For dates and times, see:
http://www.willamette.edu/~anicgors/salemaia |
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