Courses for Spring 2023
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CLAS
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The Meaning of History in the Ancient World
What is history for? Why do we study the history of the distant past, and what did the people living in the distant past think about their own history? This course investigates the way the histories of ancient Greece and Rome have been told, from ancient times to today, inspiring both contemporary methods of writing academic history and racialized constructions of ‘Western Civilization’. We will read works of famous historians like Herodotus, Thucydides, Polybius, Livy, Sallust, and Tacitus, and examine what purposes they pursued in writing history; how later generations have used these narratives, and for what purposes; and how we can or should use them today. All readings in English. For first year students only.CLAS 0210F S01
- Primary Instructor
- Russell
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The Odyssey in Literature and Film (COLT 0710Q)
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Roman Mythology
Introduction to Ancient Roman mythological traditions. Far from simply assimilating Greek myths and changing the names of divinities and heroes, the Romans were highly creative in their adaptation of myths from various other cultures. They had a rich store of myths and legends of their own, including dual foundation stories for Rome itself (Aeneas and the Trojans; Romulus and Remus) as well as mytho-historic tales of exemplary heroes and heroines (e.g. Horatius and Lucretia) whose exploits provided models for future Roman generations. Even obviously flesh-and-blood persons (e.g. Regulus, Hannibal, Caesar, Cleopatra) take on mythical status. We'll focus on the ancient material - literature, art, architecture, religious rituals, etc. - with a look as well at the rich reception of Roman mythology in later literature and art. We'll consider also the way the Romans themselves understood – and manipulated – their myths.CLAS 0920 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
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India’s Classical Performing Arts
South Asia is home to rich classical traditions in the performing arts – drama, dance, music – which continue into the present. These performative traditions are accompanied by theoretical analyses going back to the Nātyaśāstra attributed to the sage Bharata, (2nd c. BCE-6th c. CE). This course introduces students to these traditions and theories to allow for an informed appreciation of South Asia's classical arts. This course will include reading classical texts in translation and experiencing, analyzing, and discussing recorded performances. The final portion of the course will examine the influence of the classical arts on Bollywood film.CLAS 0995 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Buchta
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Slavery in the Ancient World
Examines the institution of slavery in the ancient world, from Mesopotamia and the Near East to the great slave societies of classical Greece and (especially) imperial Rome; comparison of ancient and modern slave systems; modern views of ancient slavery from Adam Smith to Hume to Marx to M.I. Finley. Readings in English.CLAS 1120E S01
- Primary Instructor
- Bodel
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Encountering Monsters in Comparative Literature (COLT 1815U)
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Foundations Classical Heritage (HIST 1202)
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Mediterranean Culture Wars: Archaic Greek History, c. 1200 to 479 BC
From the end of the Bronze Age to the end of the Persian Wars is a period of considerable change in the Mediterranean and beyond. The Greek polis challenges the powers of the ancient Near East. Over seven centuries we meet Greek writing, Homeric epic, and the first historian (Herodotus). But the Greek world lay on the edges of the Ancient Near East and this course tries to offer a more balanced approach than the typically Hellenocentric perspective of the standard textbooks. CLAS 1210 addresses cultural, political, social, and economic histories. Literary, epigraphical and archaeological cultures provide the evidence. There are no written exams for this course. No previous knowledge of the ancient world is required.CLAS 1210 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Oliver
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Outside Philosophy (HMAN 1975W)
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Ancient Law, Society and Jurisprudence
After a brief survey of modern legal systems (USA, common and civil law systems), we return to Athens and Rome. Topics: sources of law, its evolution, (e.g., feuding societies); procedural law (e.g., how to bring cases); legal reasoning; rhetoric; substantive law (e.g., regarding marriage, religion, homicide). Different approaches are used: historical, comparativist, anthropological, case-law study.CLAS 1770 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
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Women Writing Epic
This course will introduce students to English translations and adaptations of Greek and Roman epic poetry to consider the politics of representing and publishing women in the modern (mostly) North American literary marketplace. Ancient Greek and Roman epic can be quite androcentric: a genre dominated by men about men talking with or fighting each other, all in the hopes of reproducing “great” men. Often, the women function as backgrounded appendages of the foregrounded men or, if significant, effect something catastrophic. We will revisit these dynamics in the ancient texts and read contemporary works that address them. We will thus explore how literary genre genders authors and readers in relation to war, citizenship, race, class, sexuality and/or celebrity. How does epic reify, reflect, and otherwise negotiate social identities or formations? What needs to happen for women to write epic? What happens when women write epic? Which kind of women does the publishing industry want/allow to write epic now?CLAS 1930F S01
- Primary Instructor
- Eccleston
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Special Topics
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course.CLAS 1970 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Buchta
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Amanatidou
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S04
- Primary Instructor
- Cherry
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S05
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S06
- Primary Instructor
- Bodel
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S07
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S08
- Primary Instructor
- Nieto Hernandez
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S09
- Primary Instructor
- Gill
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S10
- Primary Instructor
- Fitzgerald
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S11
- Primary Instructor
- Haynes
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S12
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S13
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S14
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1970 S15
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Conference: Especially for Honors Students
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course.CLAS 1990 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Amanatidou
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Gill
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S04
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S05
- Primary Instructor
- Laird
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S06
- Primary Instructor
- Kidd
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S07
- Primary Instructor
- Hanink
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S08
- Primary Instructor
- Oliver
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S09
- Primary Instructor
- Nieto Hernandez
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S10
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S11
- Primary Instructor
- Hamilakis
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S12
- Primary Instructor
- Russell
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S13
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S14
- Primary Instructor
- Bodel
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S15
- Primary Instructor
- Haynes
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S16
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 1990 S17
- Primary Instructor
- Buchta
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Roman Topography
That actions occur in place is obvious, but how does place define action, and how do actions define place? How does the accretion of meanings assigned to a place through repeated use provide significance to the current actions, affect reinterpretations of past events, and effect future uses? Topography explores not only the history of monuments but also the constellation of meanings shaped by the interaction of monuments with each other in the cultural landscape. Topographical relationships serve as an imprint of a particular community's social, political, economic, and religious behavior within and across space and time. Ancient Roman case studies.CLAS 2010B S01
- Primary Instructor
- Russell
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Alexandrian Poetry
We will read extensive selections in the original languages from Hellenistic Greek poetry and Latin poetry with Hellenistic influence, with an eye to their historical and cultural context and to their intertextual dimension.CLAS 2930A S01
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
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Preliminary Examination Preparation
For graduate students who have met the tuition requirement and are paying the registration fee to continue active enrollment while preparing for a preliminary examination.CLAS 2970 S01
- Schedule Code
- E: Graduate Thesis Prep
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Reading and Research
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course. Instructor permission required.CLAS 2980 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Oliver
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Bodel
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Cherry
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S04
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S05
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S06
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S07
- Primary Instructor
- Fitzgerald
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S08
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S09
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S10
- Primary Instructor
- Nieto Hernandez
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S11
- Primary Instructor
- Haynes
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
CLAS 2980 S12
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Thesis Preparation
For graduate students who have met the residency requirement and are continuing research on a full time basis.CLAS 2990 S01
- Schedule Code
- E: Graduate Thesis Prep
GREK
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Intensive Introduction to Ancient Greek
Intensive, one-semester introduction to Greek. No previous knowledge of Greek is required. This is a double credit course.GREK 0110 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Levin
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Essentials of the Greek Language
Second half of a two-semester approach to ancient Greek with special emphasis on developing facility in rapid reading of Greek literature. Selections from Attic Greek authors. Students typically have completed GREK0100, or have the equivalent already.GREK 0200 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Xie
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Introduction to Greek Literature
Prerequisite: GREK 0300 (or the equivalent). Review of grammar of the Attic dialect through rapid reading of texts by Lysias, Plato, or Xenophon. Emphasis on syntax and style.GREK 0400 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Grunberger-Kirsh
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Euripides
Introduction to the study of Athenian tragedy. Thorough translation of one drama with attention to literary analysis. Rapid survey of other Euripidean plays.GREK 1050B S01
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
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Daphnis and Chloe
Goethe said that you should read Longus’ “Daphnis and Chloe” once a year (in Greek, of course!). So if you haven’t read it yet, it’s time. One of the first novels ever written, it offers pirates, erotic encounters, and numerous goat-filled landscapes. Discussions include the origins and development of the prose novel, the political and social context of the times, and the beauty of Longus’ idyllic narrative.GREK 1111D S01
- Primary Instructor
- Kidd
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Special Topics
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course.GREK 1910 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Hanink
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S03
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S04
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S05
- Primary Instructor
- Nieto Hernandez
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S06
- Primary Instructor
- Oliver
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S07
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S08
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S09
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1910 S10
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Conference: Especially for Honors Students
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course.GREK 1990 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1990 S02
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1990 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Nieto Hernandez
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1990 S04
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 1990 S05
- Primary Instructor
- Hanink
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Plato's Sophist and Statesman (PHIL 2105)
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Preliminary Exam Preparation
For graduate students who have met the tuition requirement and are paying the registration fee to continue active enrollment while preparing for a preliminary examination.GREK 2970 S01
- Schedule Code
- E: Graduate Thesis Prep
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Reading and Research
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course. Instructor permission required.GREK 2980 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S02
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S04
- Primary Instructor
- Hanink
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S05
- Primary Instructor
- Gill
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S06
- Primary Instructor
- Nieto Hernandez
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S07
- Primary Instructor
- Kidd
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S08
- Primary Instructor
- Oliver
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S09
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S10
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S11
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S12
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S13
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S14
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
GREK 2980 S15
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Thesis Preparation
For graduate students who have met the residency requirement and are continuing research on a full time basis.GREK 2990 S01
- Schedule Code
- E: Graduate Thesis Prep
LATN
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Intensive Introduction to Latin
This course offers a rapid introduction to the Latin language and grammar. As a one-semester introduction to material often covered in two semesters, this course carries two credit hours instead on one. The workload for this course is correspondingly heavy; students may expect an average of ten hours of homework—including memorization, practice, and preparation of vocabulary and grammar—per week. There are no prerequisites for this course.LATN 0110 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Ziegler
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Essentials of the Latin Language
Second course in an intensive two-semester approach to Latin. Special emphasis on developing facility in the rapid reading of Latin literature. No previous knowledge of Latin is required prior to taking this two course sequence.LATN 0200 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Sappenfield
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Introduction to Latin Literature
Introduction to Latin literature through intensive reading of major authors in prose and poetry with careful attention to grammar and style. Prerequisite: LATN 0100, 0200 or 0110 (or equivalent).LATN 0400 S01
- Primary Instructor
- McInerney
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Horace Satires, Epistles and 'Ars Poetica'
We will read selections from each of these collections of Horace's hexameter poetry, in which we learn much about the poet's life and education, his friendships with Vergil and others, his relationship with his patron Maecenas and eventually with Augustus, and his theories about the "Art of Poetry" as it should best be practiced and appreciated. We will also consider the place of Horace's poems in the development of the satirical and epistolary genres at Rome as well as the influence of these works on the later poetic (and literary-critical) tradition.LATN 1050 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
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Literature at the Court of Charlemagne
We will read widely in the Latin literature of the eighth and ninth centuries, paying attention to genre, meter, patronage, and the shifting uses put to poetry in the decades in which Charlemagne ruled.LATN 1110H S01
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
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Lucan's Civil War
We will read selected books of Lucan's Civil War (Bellum Civile) in Latin and the poem in its entirety in English. Alongside the primary goal of refining our facility with Latin language, we will also become increasingly familiar with and sensitive to Lucan's style, his poem's place within the development of Greco-Roman epic, and the socio-political context(s) of his poem's creation (e.g. Nero and the Pisonian conspiracy). Themes to be discussed may include, but are not limited to, the grotestque, epic's both complimentary and critical relationship to empire, ambition and Roman gender constructs, and the dynamics between art and politics.LATN 1110P S01
- Primary Instructor
- Eccleston
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Latin Radicals (HMAN 1975V)
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Survey of Roman Literature II: Empire
This course will survey the major authors of Latin literature in chronological order from Virgil.LATN 1820 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
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Special Topics
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course.LATN 1970 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Bodel
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S04
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S05
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S06
- Primary Instructor
- Vitas
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S07
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S08
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S09
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1970 S10
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Conference: Especially for Honors Students
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course.LATN 1990 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Bodel
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1990 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1990 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1990 S04
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1990 S05
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1990 S06
- Primary Instructor
- Hanink
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 1990 S07
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Preliminary Exam Preparation
For graduate students who have met the tuition requirement and are paying the registration fee to continue active enrollment while preparing for a preliminary examination.LATN 2970 S01
- Schedule Code
- E: Graduate Thesis Prep
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Reading and Research
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course. Instructor permission required.LATN 2980 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Bodel
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Debrohun
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S03
- Primary Instructor
- Reed
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S04
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S05
- Primary Instructor
- Pucci
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S06
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S07
- Primary Instructor
- Laird
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S08
- Primary Instructor
- Scafuro
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
LATN 2980 S09
- Primary Instructor
- Laird
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Thesis Preparation
For graduate students who have met the residency requirement and are continuing research on a full time basis.LATN 2990 S01
- Schedule Code
- E: Graduate Thesis Prep
MGRK
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Introduction to Modern Greek
A continuation of MGRK 0100. New students may place into it, after special arrangement with the instructor. The course continues on an integrative skills approach and aims to develop language skills, within a framework of specific topics and functions. The course objectives are to enable students to perform a range of tasks, master a minimum core vocabulary and acquire knowledge and understanding of various forms of Greek culture.MGRK 0200 S02
- Primary Instructor
- Calotychos
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Intermediate Modern Greek
A continuation of MGRK 0300. New students may place into it, after special arrangement with the instructor. It aims to enhance language skills within a variety of registers and themes; enable the students to master, use and understand effectively essential linguistic structures; examine a variety of expressive forms within an authentic cultural context.MGRK 0400 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Butler
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Decolonizing Classical Antiquity: White Nationalism, Colonialism, and Ancient Material Heritage
Why do the material remnants of classical antiquity still attract public attention and exercise symbolic power? Why have such monuments been "used" by authorities and diverse social groups in the service of often totalitarian agendas? What are the cases where these monuments operate as weapons for resistance? How has colonial, racial, and national modernity shaped the way we understand and experience the materiality of the classical? Finally, how can we decolonize classical antiquity? We will use a diversity of global case studies, including modern Greece and Europe, and a variety of sources, from ethnographically derived performances to digital culture.MGRK 1220 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Hamilakis
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Special Topics in Modern Greek
No description available.MGRK 1910 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Amanatidou
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
SANS
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Elementary Sanskrit II
This course continues the survey of grammar and the reading exercises of SANS 100. The second half of this course reads selected passages of the Bhagavad Gītā and the beginning of the classic story of Nala and Damayantī from the Mahābhārata. Prerequisite: SANS 0100.SANS 0200 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Buchta
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Classical Schools of Indian Philosophy
Introduction to the classical Brahminic darsanas (comprehensive, rationalized systems of philosophy and, or, theology dealing with Hermeneutics and Philosophy of Language, Logic, Metaphysics, and Ultimate Beatitude) and to corresponding Buddhist and Jain traditions through reading, in Sanskrit, of selected works. Prerequisite: SANS 0400.SANS 1800 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Buchta
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Independent Study - Special Topics
SANS 1970 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Buchta
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Conference: Especially for Honors Students
Section numbers vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course. Instructor's permission required.SANS 1990 S01
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
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Sanskrit Preliminary Exam Preparation
For graduate students who have met the tuition requirement and are paying the registration fee to continue active enrollment while preparing for a preliminary examination.SANS 2970 S01
- Schedule Code
- E: Graduate Thesis Prep
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Sanskrit Reading and Research
Section numbers will vary by instructor. Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course. Instructor permission required.SANS 2980 S01
- Primary Instructor
- Fitzgerald
- Schedule Code
- I: Independent Study/Research
