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COURSES SPRING 2004

GRADUATE COURSES

CLA500 - Greek Prose Composition
A weekly exercise in translating selected passages of English into Greek, with intensive study of grammar and style. Research paper not required for credit. Offered alternately with 501.
Professor Andrew Ford
Seminar: 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. - T

CLA515/COM515 – Problems in Greek Literature: Didactic Poetry/Wisdom Literature
Special problems are selected for intensive investigation, such as the origin and development of a genre, analysis of form, and history of ideas.
Professor Leslie Kurke
Seminar: 1:30-4:20 - M

CLA521 - Problems in Greek History: Conflict
Special problems, such as Athenian imperialism, Sparta, political structures, and the political role of cults and festivals, are studied in rotation.
Professor Josiah Ober
Seminar: 3:00-6:00 - T

CLA526 – Problems in Greek and Roman Philosophy: Pre Socratic Philosophy
Special problems are selected for intensive investigation. The subject matter of the course changes toadapt to the particular interests of the students and the instructor.
Professor Christian Wildberg
Seminar: 1:30-4:30 - Th

CLA540 – Latin Historiography
An intensive study of one or more major historical writers such as Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus
Professor Andrew Feldherr
Seminar: 8:30-11:20 - W

CLA543 – Problems in Latin Literature: Roman Poetry as Speech and Writing
Special problems are selected for intensive investigation, such as the origin and development of a genre, analysis of form, and history of ideas.
Professor Kathleen McCarthy
Seminar: 1:30 - 4:20 - W

CLA546 – Problems in Roman History: Greek Conceptions and Representations of Republican Rome
Larger themes, such as Roman imperialism, the decline of the republic and the rise of the multicultural empire, are considered in rotation with the study of specific problems and ancillary disciplines.
Professor Furgus Millar
Seminar: 10:00-12:50 - T

 

 

Updated February 9, 2004 - 3:00 pm by Donna