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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(221) (Formerly offered as CLAS 221.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Extensive reading of a relatively wide range of authors of representative classical Latin prose and poetry.
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3.00 Credits
(224) (Formerly offered as CLAS 224.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Books VII-XII of the Aeneid and a study of the relation of the Aeneid to earlier Greek epic and to the later epic tradition.
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3.00 Credits
(225) (Formerly offered as CLAS 225.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Selected plays of Plautus, Terence, and Seneca, with lectures on Roman theatre and the development of drama.
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3.00 Credits
(226) (Formerly offered as CLAS 226.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Selections from the lyrics of Horace and Catullus, with lectures on metrical patterns and the influence of Greek lyrics.
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3.00 Credits
(227) (Formerly offered as CLAS 227.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Selections from Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus.
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3.00 Credits
(232) (Formerly offered as CLAS 232.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Prerequisite: CAMS 1124, or three or more years of Latin in high school. Taught in Latin. Reading of texts from a number of periods and in a variety of styles, with consideration of morphological, syntactical, and semantic developments.
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3.00 Credits
(241W) (Formerly offered as CLAS 241W.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800. Recommended preparation: CAMS 1101 or 1102 or 1103. A knowledge of Greek or Latin is not required. A study of classical epic, with special emphasis on Homer's Iliad and Odyssey and Vergil' s Aeneid, but including also other examples of the genre. Oral and literary epic, their social and political contexts, and the influence of classical epic on later literature.
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3.00 Credits
(242W) (Formerly offered as CLAS 242W.) Either semester, alternate years. Three credits. Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800. Recommended preparation: CAMS 1101 or 1102 or 1103. A knowledge of Greek or Latin is not required. Selected plays from the works of Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, Plautus, Terence, and Seneca. The origin and development of Greek drama, its transformation in the Roman period, and the influence of classical drama on later literature.
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3.00 Credits
(243) (Also offered as HIST 3340.) (Formerly offered as CLAS 243.) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. The profound social and cultural changes that redefined the cities, the frontiers, and the economies of the classical world and led to the Middle Ages. Developments in the eastern and western Mediterranean lands between the second and seventh centuries, including: Neo-Platonism, the spread of Christianity, Rabbinic Judaism, and Islam.
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3.00 Credits
(244) (Formerly offered as CLAS 244.) Either semester. Three credits. A knowledge of Greek and Latin is not required. Johnson Examines a range of novels and other fictions from the Greco-Roman world. Works read will include the Greek sentimental novels, the satirical Roman novels of Petronius and Apeleius, and a variety of other pagan, Jewish, and Christian fictions.
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