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Spring 2026
This course explores the origins and debates of Athenian democracy in the fifth century BCE through historical study and immersive role-play. Students examine primary sources from Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, and Aristotle and then reenact the conflicts of 403 BCE in the Reacting to the Past game "The Threshold of Democracy," debating questions of citizenship, empire, justice, and political participation in the world's first democracy.
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Spring 2026
What does it mean to say that Cleopatra was black, or not? Ancient history comes up often in modern debates about race. We will investigate how people understood racial and ethnic difference in the ancient Greco-Roman Mediterranean, and how interpretations of antiquity historically have shaped modern concepts of race. We will study relevant art and literature from the 8th century BCE through the 3rd century CE, and modern responses to both.
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Fall 2025
Independent research under direction of a faculty member leading to writing of a Distinguished Majors thesis or comparable project
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Fall 2025
Independent research under direction of a faculty member leading to writing of a Distinguished Majors thesis or comparable project
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Spring 2026
Writing of Distinguished Majors thesis or comparable project.Prerequisite: GREE 4998
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Spring 2026
Writing of Distinguished Majors thesis or comparable project.Prerequisites: LATI 4998
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Spring 2025
This course examines the major prose authors of Ancient Greek by reading both ancient accounts of their style and recent linguistic scholarship covering the syntactic and pragmatic issues relevant to the understanding of prose style (e.g. word order, particle use). Rather than approaching the topic through composition, the class will read selections from the ancient authors in close conjunction with pertinent linguistic and stylistic literature.
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Fall 2025
This course will explore the language of Greek epic poetry (chiefly Homer, but also Hesiod, the Hymns, and Apollonius). What is the nature of the epic Kunstsprache? How does its syntax differ from that of Classical Attic? To what extent can linguistic features be used to date the poems? How much flexibility does the poet have in the use of formulas? How do later poets manipulate the traditional linguistic patterns inherited from earlier epic?
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Fall 2025
Reading of Lucan's epic De bello civili in the light of modern scholarship, with attention to various related topics (textual transmission, scholia, later reception).
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Spring 2026
Independent Study in Greek. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.
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