Augustus and the Shaping of Rome
CLA 3130 (Professor: TBA)
Augustus, the first Roman emperor, famously boasted that he found Rome a city of brick and left it a city of marble. No less profound than his change to the physical city was his reshaping of Roman society, politics. and culture, especially literature, to conform to his vision of Roman grandeur, grounded in a nostalgic vision of the past and intended to last an eternity. Rome produced some of its most famous authors in this period鈥擵ergil, Livy, Horace, Ovid, Propertius, and Tibullus鈥攂ut the relationship between literature and power had its dangers. In this course we will start by looking at the figure of Augustus himself and his goals as portrayed in a variety of sources, and we will then examine selected readings from these authors to see how their writings reflected or even promoted Augustus鈥 totalizing program but also resisted and undermined it.
CLA 3530 (Professor: TBA)
脌 pr茅ciser
The Greek East from Alexander to Augustus
CLA|HIS 4150 (Professor: TBA)
From Alexander鈥檚 fabled march to the royal court of Cleopatra, the Greek East is often described by ancient sources as exotic and dangerous, a place of mysterious beliefs, Lucullan luxury, and alluring riches. In essence, the world between Egypt and India was 鈥榦thered鈥 by the Greek sources: whereas Greeks were seen to be masculine, moderate, logical, and free, so Easterners were portrayed as effeminate, opulent, untrustworthy, and docile. This course examines the East as an idea which appears and reappears in the ancient Mediterranean world between the fourth and the first centuries B.C. The impact of this era and region on antique history is immeasurable, as the period saw Alexander鈥檚 campaigns remake ideas about gender, masculinity, and the warrior king; Homer鈥檚 Trojan War take on new significance as a fight between Greeks and barbarians over civilisation itself; and Alexandria with its Museion and library become the one of the world鈥檚 great cultural capitals. The East is equally the place from where Augustus took his ideas about monarchy when he became the first emperor of Rome. Thus, the East in the period between Alexander and Augustus unifies the entire ancient world, bridging not just the Mediterranean and antique Mesopotamia, but equally classical Greece with Imperial Rome.
De Hom猫re aux marches de St-Pierre : le parcours de l鈥櫭﹑op茅e dans l'Antiquit茅
CLA 4551 (Professor: M.-P. Bussi猫res)
Ce s茅minaire vise 脿 explorer le d茅veloppement du genre litt茅raire 茅pique en grec et en latin. Depuis les 茅pop茅es fondatrices mises sous le nom d鈥橦om猫re, en passant par les 茅pop茅es litt茅raires d鈥櫭﹑oque hell茅nistique et latine, les 茅pop茅es mythologiques, historiques, ou parodiques (comme la Batrachomyomachie : le combat des grenouilles et des souris) sont toutes distinctes, mais toutes en dialogue. Ce ph茅nom猫ne d鈥櫭﹎ulation n鈥櫭﹑argne pas l鈥櫭﹑op茅e biblique, qui avait pour but de raconter des 茅pisodes de l鈥橝ncien et du Nouveau Testament dans une forme plus litt茅raire que l鈥檕riginal. Le dernier exemple, les Actes des ap么tres d鈥橝rator, a 茅t茅 lu dans l鈥櫭ゞlise St-Pierre-aux-liens au milieu du 6e si猫cle, faisant durer la pratique du genre jusqu鈥櫭 la toute fin de l鈥橝ntiquit茅.
Selections from Cicero
LCL 3102 (Professor: TBA)
Marcus Tullius Cicero (106鈥43 B.C.) was a lawyer, a statesman and a prolific writer who was a contemporary of Julius Caesar and Pompey the Great. His works include not only political and legal speeches and works on oratory, but also works on philosophy and religion, and a collection of personal letters that provide a fascinating window into Roman society and politics at the end of the Republic. In this course we will study a selection of his writings from different genres supplemented with some advanced Latin grammar.
Lucian鈥檚 True Stories and Plato鈥檚 Apology
LCL 3152 (Professor: R. Burgess)
Introduction to Greek authors including a grammar review component. This course has variable topics and may be taken several times if the themes are different. Texts this term include Lucian鈥檚 True Stories and Plato鈥檚 Apology.
Longus, Daphnis and Chloe
LCL 4150 (Professor:J. Dijkstra)
In this course, Daphnis and Chloe by the second-century author Longus will be central, one of the most famous ancient Greek novels. The novel describes how the two foundlings, brought up by shepherds, come of age and gradually discover love.