University of Guelph 1997-98 Undergraduate Calendar

XII--Course Descriptions


Classical Studies

Department of Languages and Literatures

These courses (except the double-weighted courses) do not require a knowledge of the Greek or Latin languages.

24-100 Introduction to Classical Culture F,W(3-0)

A wide-ranging look at essential features of Greek and of Roman culture and society. Considerable emphasis will be given to the classical views of the human condition.

Course Profile

24-200 Classical Mythology W(3-0)

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.

Course Profile

24-215 Art and Archaeology of Greece F(3-0)

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.

Course Profile

24-230 Classical and Early Christian Education W(3-0)

A study of educational theory and practice: the Classical Greek achievement (Isocrates, Plato, Aristotle), the Roman adaptation (Cicero, Quintilian) and the general acceptance of the mature 3-stage educational system by Christian intellectuals (Origen, Augustine). (Offered in even-numbered years.)

Course Profile

24-2301:2 Classical Education (in Latin) W(3-0:3-0))

This double-weighted course, which is offered in conjunction with 24-230, adds to the content of that course the reading and study in Latin of certain primary sources, in particular Cicero, Quintilian, Augustine. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-2301 and 24-2302 in the same semester. (Offered in even-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 61-200
Exclusions: 24-230
Course Profile

24-300 The Rise and Fall of Athens F(3-0)

Greek history in the 5th century; the development of Athenian democracy; the Peloponnesian War and the decline of Athenian dominance. Special attention is paid to the literature and thought of the period. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 24-200 or 49-285.
Course Profile

24-3001:2 The Rise and Fall of Athens (in Greek) F(3-0:3-0)

This double-weighted course, offered in conjunction with 24-300, augments the content of that course with the reading and study in Greek of selected primary sources, such as Herodotus, Thucydides, and Plutarch. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-3001 and 24-3002 in the same semester. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 48-202
Exclusions: 24-300
Course Profile

24-301 The Roman Revolution W(3-0)

An examination of the collapse of the Roman Republic and the development of the Imperial government under Augustus. The paradox of the external power and inner instability of Rome. (Offered in even-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 24-200 or 49-285.
Course Profile

24-3011:2 The Roman Revolution (in Latin) W(3-0:3-0)

This double-weighted course, offered in conjunction with 24-301, augments the content of that course with the reading and study in Latin of selected primary sources, notably Sallust, Cicero, Caesar, and Suetonius. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-3011 and 24-3012 in the same semester. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 61-200
Exclusions: 24-301
Course Profile

24-302 History of the Hellenistic World F(3-0)

The rise and fall of the Hellenistic states from the death of Alexander the Great until the Roman conquest, with political emphasis on the development of the monarchies and cultural emphasis on the Hellenization of the East. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 24-200 or 49-285.
Course Profile

24-3021:2 History of the Hellenistic World (in Greek) F(3-0:3-0)

This double-weighted course, offered in conjunction with 24-302, augments the content of that course with the reading and study in Greek of selected Greek sources pertaining to the history of the Hellenistic World, primarily Polybius and Plutarch. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-3021 and 24-3022 in the same semester. (Offered in even-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 48-202
Exclusions: 24-302
Course Profile

24-303 Epic Heroes and Poems W(3-0)

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 Virgils Aeneid; other poems are also studied. (Offered in even-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 24-200.
Course Profile

24-3031:2 Epic Heroes and Poems (in Greek) W(3-0:3-0)

This double-weighted course, offered in conjunction with 24-303, augments the content of that course with 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. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-3031 and 24-3032 in the same semester. (Offered in even-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 48-202.
Exclusions: 24-303.
Course Profile

24-304 Greek Tragedy and Comedy W(3-0)

The nature of tragedy, and the existential and moral questions raised by the plays of Aischylos, Sophokles, and Euripides. Comedy, fantasy, and society in Aristophanes. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 24-200.
Course Profile

24-3041:2 Greek Tragedy and Comedy (in Greek) W(3-0:3-0)

This double-weighted course, taught together with 24-304, complements the content of that course by the reading and study in Greek of an extant play. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-3041 and 24-3042 in the same semester. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 48-202.
Exclusions: 24-304.
Course Profile

24-310 Religion in Greece and Rome F(3-0)

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.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 24-200.
Course Profile

24-3101:2 Religion in Greece and Rome (in Latin) F(3-0:3-0)

This double-weighted course, offered in conjunction with 24-310, supplements that course's content by the reading and study of Latin primary sources. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-3101 and 24-3102 in the same semester.(Offered in even-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 61-200.
Exclusions: 24-310.
Course Profile

24-311 Byzantium: A World Civilization F(3-0)

The study of Byzantine culture in the Eastern part of the Roman Empire in late antiquity and in the Middle Ages. Particular attention will be paid to the transmission of classical culture in the Middle Ages and the relations with the Medieval West and the Slavic World. (Offered in even-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 49-285 or 49-220.
Course Profile

24-315 Roman Art and Urbanism W(3-0)

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 in architecture, sculpture and painting. It will illuminate the development of the urban space in the context of cultural, social and political life.

Exclusions: 03-353, 03-450.
Course Profile

24-320 Sport in Antiquity F(3-0)

The history of sport in Greece and Rome from Homer to the Caesars, with emphasis on its relationship to religion, education, literature, and community life. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 24-100 or 24-200 or 24-230.
Course Profile

24-400 Novel and Romance in Antiquity F(3-0)

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.)

Prerequisites: 24-303 or 24-304.
Course Profile

24-4001:2 Novel and Romance in Antiquity (in Latin) F(3-0:3-0)

This double-weighted course, which is taught in tandem with 24-400, complements that course's content by the reading and study in Latin of an extant novel. This is a double-weighted course. When you select it, you must list both 24-4001 and 24-4002 in the same semester. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)

Prerequisites: 61-200
Exclusions: 24-400
Course Profile

24-415 Research Paper in Classics F,W(3-0)

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.

Prerequisites: 3 Classical Studies course credits at the 300 level.
Course Profile

24-440 Seminar in Classics W(3-0)

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.

Prerequisites: 3 Classical Studies course credits at the 300 level.
Course Profile


1998-99 Undergraduate Calendar
XII--Course Descriptions

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Last revised: November 4, 1997.