GRKM W4250y. The Greek Islands 1600-present. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010. Prerequisites:GRKM V1201-GRKM V1202 or permission of the instructor
Texts in Greek and English. Selective survey of key literary texts from
Crete, the Ionian Isles, the Cyclades, and the Dodecannese as well as western
texts about these topoi. Sometime island paradises and retreats;
othertimes sites of political internment or occupation, texts will be read in
historical specificity, in linguistic, cultural, political, utopic terms.
Texts will include selections from Kornaros's Erotokritos, Jesuit
Cycladic theater, folksongs, Solomos, Papadiamantis, Theotokis, Venezis,
Elytis, Ritsos, Karapanou as well as some Greek and foreign contemporary
films.
Classics
CLGM W4290 (Section 001). GREECE AT THE CROSSROADS. 4 pts.
This course introduces students to key aspects of Modern Greek culture as
well as to faculty at Columbia working on Greece in different departments.
Readings focus on moments when Greece's position at the crossroads between
East and West become comparatively relevant to particular disciplines.
Students study works by poets, novelists, filmmakers, literary critics,
historians, anthropologists and architects; Columbia faculty and invited
guests then discuss their own scholarship in these fields. Texts are
available in both English and Greek. The course can be taken with a
one-credit extra hour tutorial for advanced students reading materials in
Greek.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLGM W4290
|
|
CLGM
4290
|
15899
001
|
Tu 7:10p - 9:00p
613 Hamilton Hall
|
K. Van Dyck
|
4
|
|
CLGM W4390 (Section 001). THE POLITICS OF POIEIN: GREEK. 3
pts.
This course stages an imaginary dialogue between certain Greek poets, whose
work spans the 20th century, and poets of the same era from other parts of
the world, for whom Greek motifs are crucial to their poetic sensibility.
These motifs may pertain to both ancient and modern figures of Hellenism, but
even when the figures are recognizably ancient the assumption is that they
extend themselves to an outmaneuverable modernity. Indeed, by staging this
dialogue, the course will engage in interrogations of modernity and,
moreover, the specific ways in which figures of modernity and figures of
Hellenism are entwined. At the same time, we will pay close attention to
different articulations of poi?sis, especially as they pertain to a certain
politics. The literary historical sphere spans the range of early modernism
to postmodernism and postcolonialism, as well as specific poetic-political
sensibilities, whether aestheticist or Marxist, feminist or queer.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLGM W4390
|
|
CLGM
4390
|
78779
001
|
M 6:10p - 8:00p
607 Hamilton Hall
|
S. Gourgouris
|
4
|
|
ANCS G8210. Alexandrianism In Roman Literature. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. An examination of the reception of
Alexandrian poetry and literary theory in Rome, from the time of Ennius to
the early Empire, with particular emphasis on the development of Roman
poetics from the neotericism of Catullus through the classicism of high
Augustan poetry to Ovid and his imitators. Topics include claims of poetic
originality and inspiration; the recusatio; problems of adapting and
adopting Greek models (diction, metrics, subject-matter); theory of poetic
genre; satire and parody. Authors include Catullus, Lucretius, Vergil,
Propertius, Horace, Ovid, Persius, and Seneca (Apocolocyntosis).
ANCS G9310. Prefaces To History. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Instructor's permission. The
aims and methods of Greek historians as expressed in the prefaces to their
writings. Analysis of programmatic prefaces to history reveal the
differences between various methodological approaches to the composition of
historical narrative
Classical Philology
CLCV W4100y. The Ancient Curriculum. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
This course will study the characteristics, changes, and curriculum of
education in the Greek and Roman worlds. The first few weeks will concern
education in classical Greece, specifically the sophists and Plato. Then the
course will proceed to Hellenistic and Roman times and will cover the three
fundamental stages of a liberal education taught by the elementary teacher,
the grammarian, and the rhetor. Particular emphasis will be put on rhetorical
education. This course will be based on literary and archaeological sources
and on the abundant educational material from Greco-Roman Egypt. It will be
structured as a mixture of lectures, readings, and discussions of primary and
secondary sources, archaeological material, and examination of school
exercises and texts on papyri. The readings, which also include my
translations of the letters of the fourth century teacher of rhetoric
Libanius to students and parents, are available in English.
GRKM W4300y. C.P. Cavafy: Poetry at a Slight Angle. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
CLPH G4901x and y-G4902 (Section 001). Directed Reading. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Instructor's permission. Topics chosen
in consultation between members of the staff and students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLPH G4901
|
|
CLPH
4901
|
52397
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
1
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLPH G4902
|
|
CLPH
4902
|
84280
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0
|
|
CLLT G8223x. Silver Epic. Not offered in 2009-2010.
LATN G8223y. Silver Epic. 3 pts.
The Epics of the Silver Period of Latin with an emphasis on close-reading.
CLPH G8901x and y-G8902 (Section 001). Directed Reading and
Research.. 1-3 pts. Prerequisites: Departmental permission.
Topics chosen in consultation between members of the staff and students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLPH G8902
|
|
CLPH
8902
|
88033
001
|
TBA
|
Instructor To Be Announced
|
0
|
|
CLPH G9320. Comic Parody of Tragedy. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Instructor's permission.
Seminar on a detailed study of Aristophanes' Thesmophoriazusae and
Frogs with particular emphasis on the comic poet's parody of
Euripides; an examination of scenes from Euripidean dramas and readings in
English on ancient and modern theories of parody.
CLPH G9340. The Sophists. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Instructor's permission. A
study of the sophistic movement in general, followed by a detailed
examination of the main evidence for the thought of Protagoras, Gorgias, the
anonymous Iamblichus and the work On Twofold Arguments.
Classical Studies (Courses in Translation)
ANCS W4010. Roman Imperialism. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Problems in the analysis and interpretation of the
growth of Roman power between the 4th century B.C.E. and the 2nd century C.E.
The origins of the Romans' drive to expand, the theory of defensive
imperialism, economic aspects, Roman techniques of control, and the effects
of the Empire on the Romans themselves and on their subjects.
ANCS W4015. Roman Law. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. History of the development of Roman law and legal
thought. The role of law in Roman society. Introductions to Roman methods
of legal analysis, with emphasis on study and class discussion of cases from
the Roman jurists.
ANCS W4021. The Development of the Greek Polis. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Traces the development of the polis or
city-state as the dominant sociopolitical unit in ancient Greece, looking at
how and why this development took place and what effect it had on Greek
society and culture.
CLCV W4100. The Handwritten Book. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. How books were made in Antiquity and the Middle
Ages, covering the physical characteristics of handwritten books (scripts,
illustrations and illuminations, bindings, writing materials), the context in
which books were created (monastic scriptorium, cathedral library, the early
bookshops), and the audience which determined their use and contents.
CLLT W4100. The Reception of Antiquity. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. An introduction to the heritage of classical
antiquity, primarily Greece, in later European culture. Topics include
translation, iconography, the history of classical scholarship, architectural
and artistic manifestations of the classical tradition, Greek tragedy on
stage and film, and images of Athens and Sparta.
CLCV W4105x. Homosexuality in the Ancient World. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
The course will examine the homosexual practices of the ancient Greeks and
Romans, and the representation of these practices in literature and art. It
will emphasize the differences between ancient and modern constructions of
sexuality, but also the faultlines between the two ancient cultures and
within each of them. Authors read will include: Sappho, Theognis,
Aristophanes, Plato, Aeschines, Plutarch, Catullus, Vergil, Petronius, and
Martial.
CLCV W4110y. Gender and Sexuality In Ancient Greece. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Sophomore
standing or permission of the instructor.
Examination of the ways in which gender and sexuality are constructed in
ancient Greek society and represented in literature and art, with attention
to scientific theory, ritual practice, and philosophical speculation. Topics
include conceptions of the body, erotic and homoerotic literature and
practice, legal constraints, pornography, rape, and prostitution.
CLCV W4130y. Cities and Sanctuaries. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The development of major elements and noteworthy peculiarities of Greek
cities and sanctuaries. Emphasis on individual monuments and arrangement of
sites and their political, social, and religious functions throughout the
Greek world from the rise of city-states through the formation of the Roman
provinces.
CLCV W4145x. Ancient Political Theory. 3 pts.
An examination of ancient political theory in its social and philosophical
context. Topics will include constitutional theory, the origins and
legitimation of government, ethics and politics, the regulation of private
life, the rule of law, and the cosmopolis. Authors will include the Sophists,
Plato (Republic, Laws, Statesman), Aristotle (Politics), Cicero (Republic and
Laws), Polybius, Dio of Prusa (On Kingship, Borysthenic Oration), and
Augustine (City of God).
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLCV W4145
|
|
CLCV
4145
|
48748
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
607 Hamilton Hall
W 1:10p - 4:00p
607 Hamilton Hall
|
J. Zetzel
|
23
|
|
ANCS G4250. Greek Sculpture and Painting of the 4th Century B.C. 3
pts. Survey of 4th-century sculpture and painting, with emphasis on
the work of the major sculptors: Praxiteles, Skopas, and Lysippus.
ANCS G4255. Hellenistic Art. 3 pts. Greek art from Lysippus
to the end of the 1st century B.C.E. Development of the Hellenistic style,
its regional variants, principal monuments, and major themes.
ANCS G4263. Roman Art.. 3 pts. Italians, Etruscans, and the
development of Roman art from the Republic to the Early Empire.
ANCS G4270. Roman Art From Augustus To Trajan. 3 pts. Roman
art from Trajan to Constantine.
CLLT W4300y. The Classical Tradition. 3 pts.
Overview of Greek and Roman literature. Close analysis of selected texts from
the major genres accompanied by lectures on literary history. Topics include
the context out of which the genres arose, the suitability of various modern
critical approaches to the ancient texts, the problem of translation, and the
transmission of the classical authors and their influence on modern
literature.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLLT W4300
|
|
CLLT
4300
|
04024
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
TBA
|
N. Worman
|
8
|
|
CLLT W4310. Myth and Ritual. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Continuation of Classical Literature W3132. Emphasis on the organization of myth and the
persistence of ritual. Survey of different ways of approaching traditional
stories. Comparisons from non-Western cultures for the analysis of origins
and transformations of myths
ANCS G6273. Roman Art: Trajan To Constantine. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010. Some knowledge of Antiquity and German useful.
Roman art from Trajan to Constantine; examination of Roman figural art,
painting, mosaic, sculpture, their principal modes and themes of
representation, and an analysis of the late antiquity.
ANCS G8033. Colloquium: War and Society In Ancient Greece. 4 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Examines the dynamic relationship
between the evolving ways in which Greek society was structured, and the ways
in which the Greeks organized themselves for and conducted warfare at the
different stages of their social evolution.
ANCS G8049. Colloquium On Roman History: the Late Republic and
Augustus. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. Problems in the
social, economic, and religious history of the Roman empire in the period
from 100 B.C.E. to 14 C.E.
ANCS G8051. Colloquium On Roman History: the Roman Empire 14 - 235
C.E.. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. Problems in the
social, economic, and religious history of the Roman empire.
ANCS G8090. Colloquium On Ancient Egyptian History: Socio-Economic
History. 4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisites: Instructor's permission. Readings of some major
recent contributions to the study of the social and economic history of
ancient Egypt.
ANCS G8240. Sexuality In Greek and Roman Art. 3 pts. Current
scholarship on sexuality in Classical art and culture. Emphasis on depiction
of sexual identity and activity, and on contribution of visual culture to the
construction of ideas about sexuality and sexual practices.
ANCS G8249. Human Types In Greek Art, 4th Century B.C. Through
Hellenistic Period. 3 pts. Analysis of the creation, evolution, and
significance of typologically discrete representations of humanity in Greek
art, in particular the imagery of (a) statesmen, dynastic rules, and
intellectuals, (b) socially distinctive categories of age, gender, and
status, and (c) ethnic and cultural markers of non-Greeks.
ANCS G8260. Gender and Status In Roman Art. 3 pts.
Understanding the effects of social categories of gender and class on Roman
art. Focus on the way gender and class-based patronage, audience, and
artistic practice interact to help shape monuments, and the way those
monuments can give physical form to social relationships and ideologies.
ANCS G8270. Roman Art In the Time of Trajan. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Reading knowledge of German. Art and architecture
from the late 90s through 117 C.E. during the reign of the Roman emperor
Trajan. Exploration of Roman art, imperial imagery, patronage, the
relationship between the culture of the city of Rome and that of the
provinces.
ANCS G8276. Roman Sarcophagi. 3 pts. Mythological subjects,
narrative modes.
ANCS G8290. Roman Provincial Art. 3 pts. Art in the Roman
provinces, east and west.
ANCS G8408. Ovidian Themes In Antiquity and Renaissance. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Background in classical, medieval, or
Renaissance studies. Visual interpretations of mythological themes narrated
in Ovid's Metamorphoses, from Roman antiquity through medieval
adaptations and transformations to the revival of classical form in the
Renaissance. Problems of tradition and transmission, narrative mode, genre
and medium, visual hermeneutics.
ANCS G9041. Seminar On Ancient History of the Near East: Imperialism.
4 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. Compares several empires
of the ancient Near East with the territorial empires of New Kingdom Egypt,
of Assyria and Babylonia in the first millennium, and of ancient Persia, and
the trade empire of the Phoenicians. Use of the term "empire" within ancient
Near Eastern history, and determination of the common means of imperial
administration and management within examples.
ANCS G9900. Dissertation and Prospectus Seminar. 3 pts. For
all students in Ancient History, Classical Studies, and Classics who are
preparing a disseration prospectus or who are in the early stages of working
on the dissertation. Students circulate for discussion drafts of dissertation
prospectuses and other work in progress related to the dissertation.
Greek
GREK W4006. Thucydides. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Greek V1201 and V1202 or their equivalent. A close reading of Thucydides
Book 2 with consideration of its function in the History as a whole.
GREK W4009x. Satyr Play and Comedy. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Prerequisite: GREK V1201 and V1202 or their equivalent.
Since the content of the course changes from year to year, it may be taken in
consecutive years. Topic for 2007-2008: Plato
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: GREK W4009
|
|
GREK
4009
|
09533
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
227 Milbank Hall
W 1:10p - 4:00p
328 Milbank Hall
|
H. Foley
|
15
|
|
GREK W4010y. Selections From Greek Literature: Hesiod and Homeric
Hymns. 3 pts. Prerequisites: GREK V1201-V1202 or the equivalent.
Since the content of this course changes each year, it may be repeated for
credit. Topic for 2007-2008: Sophocles
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: GREK W4010
|
|
GREK
4010
|
66149
001
|
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
TBA
|
D. Steiner
|
6
|
|
GREK W4105x. History of Greek Literature I. 4 pts.
Prerequisites: At least two terms of Greek at the 3000 level or higher.
Readings in Greek literature from Homer to the 4th century B.C.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: GREK W4105
|
|
GREK
4105
|
80281
001
|
TuTh 2:10p - 4:00p
617B Hamilton Hall
Th 1:10p - 4:00p
617B Hamilton Hall
|
D. Steiner
|
10
|
|
GREK W4106y. History of Greek Literature II. 4 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: At least two terms of
Greek at the 3000 level or higher.
Greek literature of the 4th century B.C. and of the Hellenistic and Imperial
Ages.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: GREK W4106
|
|
GREK
4106
|
27250
001
|
MW 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
M. Fantuzzi
|
1
|
|
GREK G4135. The Erotokritos: Literature and Society In Renaissance
Crete. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. A
cross-disciplinary examination of literature and society in Renaissance Crete
throught a reading of Vitsentzos Kornaros's Erotokritos. Close
textual analyses of this whimsical romance in verse and projects on broader
aspects of Venetian and Cretan culture. Attention paid to questions of
gender.
GREK W4139x. Greek Prose Composition. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: At least four terms of Greek, or the equivalent.
An intensive review of Greek syntax with translation of English sentences and
paragraphs into Attic Greek.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: GREK W4139
|
|
GREK
4139
|
16947
001
|
TuTh 11:00a - 12:15p
617B Hamilton Hall
Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
617B Hamilton Hall
|
C. Charles
|
9
|
|
GREK W4150. The Greek Language. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Introduction to the phonology and morphology of the
Greek language; study of vowels and consonants, noun and verb formation, and
characteristics of the Greek dialects, in the light of the relation of Greek
to Proto-Indo-European and the comparison of Greek forms to other PIE
(Proto-Indo-European) languages, demonstrating how the comparative method in
historical linguistics accounts for the evolution of the Greek language.
GREK W4210y. Topics in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Before taking this course, it is
encouraged that you read Nichomachean Ethics and Plato's Protagoras in
English. The course will be devoted to reading Aristotle's Nicomachean
Ethics in ancient Greek and discussions will focus on concepts found
therein.
GREK G6246y. Literary Papyrology. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. This course intends to give a student the capacity
to handle literary texts on papyrus written in Greek and Latin. Students will
learn to distinguish book hands from documentary hands, will read and
evaluate ancient writing according to style, and will learn to edit new
texts. A final paper will consist of the edition of a text and the comparison
with other texts in the same tradition.
GREK G6250. Greek Paleography and Textual Criticism. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Introduction to the main kinds of Greek
scripts and to the chief problems in editing and interpreting Greek texts;
the history and transmission of Greek authors.
GREK G6254x. Greek Epigraphy. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Introduction to the use of inscriptions in the Greek
world. Readings come principally from published texts of Greek inscriptions
of the classical, Hellenistic, and Roman periods, chosen to illustrate the
range and contents of our major source of information for most Greek cities.
Attention also to the technique of inscriptions and to their sociological
function.
GREK G8024y. Plato's Phaedrus. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. A detailed study of the Phaedrus based on
lectures, reports and discussions.
GREK G8024. Plato: Symposium. 3 pts. A detailed study of
the philosophical, literary, historic, and rhetorical aspects of the
Symposium.
GREK G8024. Aristotle: Poetics. 3 pts. A detailed study of
the philosophical, literary, historic, and rhetorical aspects of the
Symposium.
GREK G8215. Aristotle: Poetics. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisite: six semesters of Greek. A close study
of the Poetics and its Platonic background.
GREK G8219y. Hellenistic Poetry of the 3rd Century BC. 3
pts. This course sets Hellenistic poetry within its own intellectual
and cultural context. Poems will be investigated as a case study of
adaptation of the archaic and classical genres in conditions of partial
socio-cultural discontinuity. Attention will also be paid to modernist
interpretations.
GREK G8221. Homer's Odyssey. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Detailed critical analysis of Homer's
Odyssey with particular emphasis on the second half of the song.
Seminar considers the concept of the hero's return, the themes of story
telling, disguise and recognition, and father-son relations. Focus on the
figures of Helen and Penelope, discussions of representations of Odysseus in
later Neo-Platonic and early Christian texts.
GREK W8241. Aeschylus' Oresteia. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Intensive study of the Agamemnon and passages from
the remaining plays in the trilogy. Major problems in the study of
Aeschylean drama.
GREK G8248. Brothers and Sisters In Greek Tragedy. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. An examination of the evolving
representation of brothers and sisters in Homer and in Greek tragedy with
emphasis on the latter. The growth of individual differences in such
representations in Sophocles and Euripides, the contrast between legitimate
and illegitimate siblings and the possible relevance of the representations
of brothers and sisters to the problem of citizenship bonds in the
5th-century Athenian democracy.
GREK G8250. Euripides' Tragicomedies. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Detailed critical analysis of Euripides'
Ion, Helen, and Iphigeneia in Tauris in the context of late
Euripidean drama. The course will emphasize questions of genre and
methodology and the relations among myth, ritual, and tragedy.
GREK G8251. The Chorus In Greek Tragedy. Not offered in
2009-2010. A detailed study of the role of the tragic chorus in
one play by each of the major tragic poets: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and
Euripides. The origin of the tragic chorus, choral performance, the use of
meter, choral identity and character, and choral songs (both act-dividing
songs and songs shared by actors and chorus).
GREK G8253. The Chorus In Greek Tragedy. 3 pts. Seminar on
dreams in Greek literature and society from Homer to the Empire. The record
of miraculous cures through dream visions from genres: Homer, tragedy,
comedy, historiography and novel philosophical text: Plato and Aristotle;
medical theories: technical treatises on the interpretation of dreams and
inscriptions (Epidauros); speeches: Aelius Aristides' Sacred Tales.
GREK G8260. Pindar and Bacchylides. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Examines the complex lyric poetry of Pindar and
Bacchylides in terms of the structural conventions of praise poetry, and the
occasions of the poems' performance and their use of myth and imagery.
GREK G8310. The Greek Novel. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. The five major Greek novels of the first to third
centuries C.E. Particular emphasis on questions of genre and the history of
ideas, and on the novel as evidence for the society and culture of the Roman
Empire.
GREK G8390x. Ancient Literary Criticism. 3 pts. This seminar
will address ancient Greek (and a
few Latin) ideas about the themes, arguments, and style of poetry and prose.
We shall look at the fragments of technai(technical treatises
on speech composition), as well as excerpts from Aristophanes'
Cloudsand Frogs, Aristotle's
Poeticsand Rhetoric,
Ps.-Demetrius' On Style, and Dionysius of
Halicarnassus' writings on Attic oratory. The discussion will also take into
account the Hellenistic and neoteric poets' contributions to literary
debates, as well as those of Cicero and Horace.
GREK G8400. Antidemocratic Thought In Classical Athens. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Basic themes in 5th- and
4th-century criticism of Athenian democracy, especially in its radical or
demagogic form, and recommended alternatives. Texts read, in part or in
whole: Aristotle, Politics and Constitution of the Athenians;
Isocrates, Areopagiticus; Plato, Republic(Books VIII
& IX); Xenophon, Constitution of the Lacedemonians; Ps.
Xenophon, Constitution of the Athenians.
GREK G8402. Legal Representations In Athens. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010. Plato's Apology and Isocrates'
Antidosis. Central issues include history of (auto)biography,
self-representation in the democratic polis; role of intellectual in the
polis; rhetoric and/versus philosophy; Attic law. Participants are encouraged
to bring similar texts to seminar for discussion and consideration.
GREK G8430. Views of the City In Greek Literature. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. The evolution of the perception of civic
space from Homer to the Second Sophistic, focusing on specific periods and
various literary genres. Combination of social history and literary
criticism.
GREK G8500x (Section 001). Greek Rhetoric. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. An examination of Demosthenes 18 and Aeschines 3
with special attention to issues of character defamation as relevant passages
from Aristotle's Rhetoric on characterization.
GREK G9240. Liberating Orestes: Aeschylus' Eumenides and Euripides'
Orestes. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. A literary,
historical, and philosophical perspective on the way that two different Greek
tragedies, Aeschylus' Eumenides and Euripides' Orestes resolve the problems posed by Orestes' matricide.
Latin
LATN W4008. Cicero. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisite: Latin V3012 or the equivalent. An introduction to the range of
Ciceronian public writings and to the social and intellectual context in
which they were composed. Selections from all the major genres of his works.
LATN W4009x. Selections From Latin Literature: Roman Comedy. 3
pts. Prerequisites:LATN V3012 or the equivalent.
Since the content of this course changes from year to year, it may be
repeated for credit.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: LATN W4009
|
|
LATN
4009
|
19691
001
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
613 Hamilton Hall
|
E. Scharffenberger
|
12
|
|
LATN W4010y. Selections From Latin Literature: Livy. 3 pts.
Prerequisites:LATN V3012 or the equivalent.
Since the content of this course changes from year to year, it may be
repeated for credit. Topic for 2007-2007: Elegy
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: LATN W4010
|
|
LATN
4010
|
25963
001
|
TuTh 2:40p - 3:55p
TBA
|
D. Steiner
|
9
|
|
LATN W4105x. Latin Literature of the Republic. 4 pts.
Prerequisites: At least two terms of Latin at the 3000 level or higher.
Latin literature from the beginning to early Augustan times.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: LATN W4105
|
|
LATN
4105
|
13101
001
|
TuTh 2:10p - 4:00p
613 Hamilton Hall
Th 1:10p - 4:00p
613 Hamilton Hall
|
G. Williams
|
11
|
|
LATN W4106y. Latin Literature of the Empire. 4 pts.
Prerequisites: At least two terms of Latin at the 3000 level or higher.
Latin literature from Augustus to 600 C.E.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: LATN W4106
|
|
LATN
4106
|
12195
001
|
MW 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
J. Zetzel
|
4
|
|
LATN W4139y. Elements of Latin Prose Style. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: At least four semesters of
Latin, or the equivalent.
Intensive review of Latin syntax with translation of English sentences and
paragraphs into Latin.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: LATN W4139
|
|
LATN
4139
|
60530
001
|
MW 11:00a - 12:15p
TBA
|
J. Zetzel
|
2
|
|
LATN W4140y. Latin Stylistics. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites:LATN W4139 or the equivalent
The study of the development of Latin prose style through practice in
composition.
LATN W4150. The Latin Language. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisite: Latin 3012 or equivalent.
Introduction to the development of the Latin language, including historical
phonology and morphology, archaic Latin, the development of literary Latin,
and colloquial and vulgar Latin texts.
LATN W4152y. Medieval Latin Literature. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Permission of the
instructor.
Since the content of this course changes from year to year, it may be taken
in consecutive years. Topic for 2006-2007: Learning and the Learned. What did
it mean to learn Latin and/or to learn in Latin in the Middle Ages? What was
learned and how? Who was considered learned? Readings and discussion of
medieval Latin sources about memory; exegesis/commentary: biblical,
philosophical, literary; gendered learning; the guidelines for poetry,
preaching, etc. Authors include Augustine, Bernard of Clairvaux, Abelard, the
Victorines, and Hildegard of Bingen.
LATN G6154y. Latin Paleography. 3 pts. Study of the
development of Latin scripts from the Carolingians to the Renaissance. The
practical skills of reading and dating scripts, the research tools for
working with manuscripts, the means and the historical context of the
production of manuscript books, with attention to the history of the
transmission of Latin texts. Manuscripts held by Columbia's Rare Book and
Manuscript Library are fully integrated into class study.
Textual Criticism and Textual Transmission
LATN G6330x. Textual Criticism. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. We reconstruct the ancient world in part from
ancient literature; we reconstruct ancient literature largely from
manuscripts written long after the works they contain. How do editors
reconstruct texts, and how can we judge their reconstructions? This course
will examine the history of classical texts from antiquity to the fifteenth
century and the theory and history of editing texts from the Renaissance to
the present. Emphasis will be on classical Latin literature, but some
consideration of Greek texts may also be useful.
LATN G8010. Vergil. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. A close reading of the Georgics with special
attention to the political and literary milieu of Rome in the late Republic.
LATN G8120y. Manilius. 3 pts. This semiar
provides an in-depth introduction to the Astronomica of M. Manilius,
a didactic poem on astrology from the late Augustan peroid. Class discussion
will focus on the work's astronomical and astrological subject matter; its
historical and political background; Manilius' larger world-view and
philosophical affiliation; and his poetics and place within literary
history.
LATN G8130. Aspects of Augustanism. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. An intensive study of the explosion of literary
production during the age of Augustus. Vergil's Aeneid; Horace's
Odes; Ovid's Metamorphoses and Fasti; Livy's Ab Urbe
Condita; Sulpicia's Consolatio ad Liviam; and selections from
Propertius and Tibullus. The cultural context of Augustan literature
emphasized by the juxtaposition of less familiar texts with the more
familiar. Examination of what Augustan literature reveals about early
imperial history and how history can be utilized to read literature.
LATN G8155. Scholarship and Learning In the Roman Republic. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Survey of Roman intellectual
history from the earliest times to the end of the republic, with special
attention to career patterns of intellectuals, teachers, and artists; Roman
interaction with Greek culture and learning; patronage of intellectuals; and
traditional branches of instruction (rhetoric, medicine, philosophy, law).
LATN G8160. Foodways In Ancient Rome: Literature and Society. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Examines Roman foodways as
fundamental aspects of culture: as guidelines to social proximity and social
distance; to ritual fraternity (and exclusivity); to political superiority
(and subordination).
LATN G8212. Lucretius. 4 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Close reading of Lucretius' de rerum natura books 1, 2, 4, and selections from the rest, with particular attention to
language and mode of exposition.
LATN G8218. Herodotus. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Acquaints graduate students with a large part of the
Greek text of Herodotus and introduces them to major interpretative issues
and to proposed scholarly solutions.
LATN G8227. Cicero. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. An intensive study of Cicero in 57-51 B.C., the
years between his exile and his departure for the Governorship of Cilicia.
The relationships between public and private attitudes and between
philosophical beliefs and political life. Readings will include portions of
De Oratore, De Republica; letters, poetry, and speeches,
particularly Pro Sestio, Pro Caelio, De Provinciis
Consularibus, In Pisonem, and Pro Milone.
LATN G8230. Claudian. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. The political poems of Claudian, studied in the
contexts of literary and contemporary politics.
LATN G8241. Sallust.. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. The extant works (Catiline,
Jugurtha, major fragments of the Histories), with an
exploration of the major scholarly approaches to, and questions about,
Sallust.
LATN G8242. Tacitus. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Readings from the Agricola and the
Annals. Concentration on the manifestations and implications of
absolute rule, and on Tacitus' selection of material and his narrative
technique.
LATN G8243. Livy: Beyond Early Rome. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Readings from Livy, with special attention to Scipio
the Elder.
LATN G8260y (Section 001). Ennius. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. A close reading of the fragments of Quintus Ennius,
including dramatic, epic and philosophical texts. Particular attention will
be paid to Ennius' double role as Hellenistic poet and as the first
self-conscious creator of and independent Roman literature.
LATN G8280x. Pagans and Christians In Late Antiquity. 3 pts.
The conflict of religions in the late fourth and early fifth centuries in its
political and social context. Artistic and literary manifestations and
documentary evidence.
LATN G8320. Literature and the Second Triumvirate. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. An examination of the surviving literary
works of the period 43-31 B.C.E., including texts by Vergil, Horace,
Propertius, Sallust, Livy, Varro, and Cornelius Nepos. Emphasis on
historical and political themes, to problems of genre, and to
interconnections among the various texts.
LATN G9246. The Germania of Tacitus and the Ethnographic Tradition. 4
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisite: instructor's
permission. A thorough examination of the Germania with an
investigation of the Graeco-Roman ethnographic tradition on which it is
based; emphasis will be on detailed research.
Of Related Interest
Art History
W4215
Aegean Art and Architecture
G6265
Roman Art I
G6270
Roman Art II: Augustus To the Flavians
History
W1004
Ancient History of Egypt