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  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: Open to Latin American Studies and Spanish majors. Distribution: None Semester: Fall, Spring Unit: 1.0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: Open to Latin American Studies and Spanish majors. Distribution: None Semester: Fall, Spring Unit: 0.5
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: By permission of department. See Academic Distinctions. Distribution: None Semester: Fall, Spring Unit: 1.0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: 360 and permission of department. Distribution: None Semester: Fall, Spring Unit: 1.0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prince, Young Introduction to the Latin language; development of Latin reading skills. Prerequisite: Open to students who do not present Latin for admission or permission of the instructor. Distribution: None Semester: Fall Unit: 1.0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Young Further development of Latin reading and language skills. Prerequisite: 101 Distribution: None Semester: Spring Unit: 1.0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prince, Young After reviewing Latin grammar in as much detail as necessary, we'll start to make the transition from Latin grammar to Latin literature and Roman culture. Selections in Latin from such authors as Catullus (poetry), the emperor Augustus (The Deeds of the Divine Augustus), and Perpetua (one of the earliest known women Latin authors). Topics to be studied might include: social status and identity (What defined you Might your status/identity change, whether for better or worse ); Rome's relation to Greece, which Rome conquered, but which long dominated Roman culture; or the nature and function of literature in Roman life . Prerequisite: 102 or Wellesley's placement exam and permission of the instructor. Distribution: Language and Literature Semester: Fall Unit: 1.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prince Vergil's Aeneid, Georgics, and Eclogues in their literary context of both Greek poetry (Homer, Apollonius of Rhodes, Euripides) and Latin poetry (Ennius, Lucretius, Catullus, Horace) and in their historical context in the reign of Augustus, the first Roman emperor. Readings in Latin from Vergil and in translation from other ancient works. Use of Internet resources on Vergil and Rome. Prerequisite: 200 or Wellesley's placement exam and permission of the instructor. Distribution: Language and Literature Semester: Spring Unit: 1.0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: Open by permission. Distribution: None Semester: Fall, Spring Unit: 1.0 LAT 250H Research or Individual Study Prerequisite: Open by permission. Distribution: None Semester: Fall, Spring Unit: 0.5 LAT 305 Roman Comedy Starr Roman comedy stands behind the Western comic tradition, all the way through Shakespeare and modern situation comedies. We'll ex-plore selected plays, in Latin and in translation, by Plautus and Terence in their literary and cultural contexts. Possible topics: the devel-opment of Roman comedy from Greek New Comedy, stock characters (e.g., the dumb young man in love, the obstructive father, the clever slave), the archaeology of the Roman theater, comedy as festival and reversal, performance, and Plautus' influence on later plays and playwrights, including Ralph Roister Doister (the earliest surviving English comedy), Shakespeare ? The Comedy of Error s, Molière, Oscar Wild e's The Importance of Being Earn est, and movies and musicals, suc h as A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the F orum and The Boys from Syrac use. Prerequisite: 201 or a 300-level Latin course or Wellesley's placement exam and permission of the instructor Distribution: Language and Literature Semester: Spring Unit : 1.0 LAT 307 Cat ullus Young NOT OFFERED IN 2009-10. Tormented lover, urbane jester, obscene abuser, political subversive, poetic revolutionary-the personae of Catullus are as varied as the poems that produce them. This course is a topical investigation of Catullus' poetry and its Roman contexts. Topics will include: poetry and biography; allusion, aesthetics and the ?New Poetry?; social performance and self-representation; Roman masculinity and femininity; obscenity and invective; sex, poetry and power. Readings will draw on a variety of theoretical orientations that inform Catullan criticism: biography, psychoanalysis, intertextuality, feminism, New His toricism. Prerequisite: 201 or a 300-level Latin course or Wellesley's placement exam and permission of the instructor. Distribution: Language and Literature Semester: Spring
  • 3.00 Credits

    NOT OFFERED IN 2009-10. Indebted to their Greek predecessors in so many genres, the Romans nevertheless claimed the erotic elegy as their own innovation. Catullus, Gallus, Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid developed the form which became the predecessor of the love language and literature of Europe. Prerequisite: 201 or a 300-level Latin course or Wellesley's placement exam and permission of the instructor. Distribution: Language and Literature Semester: N/O Unit: 1.0
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