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CL 262: Roman Civilization
3.00 Credits
Boston College
This course is a broad-scale inquiry into Roman historical experience, understanding Roman to include not only citizens of Rome, but the various peoples who came to live under Roman rule, and understanding historical experience to include art, literature, and religion as well as political development and social and economic life.
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CL 262 - Roman Civilization
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CL 275: Greece Viewed Through Her Films
3.00 Credits
Boston College
This course views Greece through the medium of films made chiefly by internationally-renowned Greek filmmakers. The films are studied as reflections of the Greek landscape and climate, history and politics, literature and culture. The course offers multiple angles on Greece (Never on Sunday, Zorba the Greek) and comparison with films of other countries--the reel leads from mythical antiquity (Iphigeneia) to the vibrant contemporary nation, in its international context on the Southeastern rim of Europe (Ulysses' Gaze, Touch of Spice). All the major films viewed are in English or have English subtitles.
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CL 275 - Greece Viewed Through Her Films
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CL 286: History and Structure of Latin
3.00 Credits
Boston College
See course description in the Slavic and Eastern Languages Department.
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CL 286 - History and Structure of Latin
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CL 302: Greek Rhetoric
3.00 Credits
Boston College
The class will explore the theory and practice of classical Greek rhetoric. From Homer onward, persuasive speech occupied a central place in Greek political and cultural life, and Greeks were the first western theorists of how and why verbal persuasion works. We will read works by early Greek orators Gorgias, Antiphon, and Lysias in Greek, along wih ancient discussions of rhetorical composition and critiques of rhetoric in English. We will focus on the construction and contexts of Greek oratory, and on the social-historical issues illuminated by the speeches themselves.
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CL 302 - Greek Rhetoric
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CL 304: Euripides' Medea
3.00 Credits
Boston College
This course will focus on reading the text in the original Greek, with attention to language and style, and an overview of recent scholarship on the play, its context, and themes.
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CL 304 - Euripides' Medea
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CL 329: Ovid's Metamorphoses
3.00 Credits
Boston College
This course is reading (in Latin) and discussion (in English) of selected stories from Ovid's long poem about bodily transformations in the world of ancient myth, taking into consideration the poem in both its literary and its historical contexts. What to make of a narrative of instability amidst the increasing rigidity of the late Augustan principate?
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CL 329 - Ovid's Metamorphoses
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CL 336: Horace: The Odes
3.00 Credits
Boston College
Close reading of selected Odes against the dual background of Greek and Hellenistic literature and of Roman culture in the early years of the Augustan principate.
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CL 336 - Horace: The Odes
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CL 338: Cicero and Sallust: Catiline
3.00 Credits
Boston College
No course description available.
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CL 338 - Cicero and Sallust: Catiline
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CL 358: Petronius
3.00 Credits
Boston College
This course will explore the dark and tawdry underbelly of Imperial Rome through the eyes of Petronius, author of the Satyricon. In addition to closely reading the Satyricon's Latin prose, we will examine its place in the canon of Greek and Roman literature and what it can tell us about Roman social history.
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CL 358 - Petronius
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CL 373: Euripides, Hecuba
3.00 Credits
Boston College
A close reading of Euripides' play Hecuba in the original Greek. The play will be studied from several viewpoints, including language, style, characters, and themes--viewing the texta in its context and in comparison with other contemporary literary works. The related scholarship will be reviewed. Participants will write their own studies on the play. This course is designed chiefly for undergraduate majors and graduate students in Classical Studies, yet students from other fields are welcome to participate.
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CL 373 - Euripides, Hecuba
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