CLAS 170: Greek and Roman Mythology Summer Session II, 2015 Course Syllabus

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CLAS 170: Greek and Roman Mythology Summer Session II, 2015 Course Syllabus Instructor: Scott Proffitt Office: 1210 Marie Mount Hall Phone: 301-213-8921 Email: wproffit@umd.edu Office Hours: online or by phone by appointment Course Goals: In Greek and Roman Mythology, we will examine the literature of the Greeks and Romans in an attempt to learn what it can tell us about the values and beliefs of these cultures. This process will give us a chance to ponder what the poetry, drama, and history of these ancient civilizations mean to us in the modern world. Due to the fact that this is a summer course, the best we can hope to do is to sample some of the highlights of the literature that lies at the very heart of the Euro-American cultural tradition. Required Texts: 1. Fagles, The Three Theban Plays Penguin Classics, 1 st ed. ISBN: 0140444254 2. Lombardo, The Essential Aeneid, Hackett, 2006. ISBN: 0872207900 3. Lombardo, The Essential Homer: Selections from the Iliad and the Odyssey, Hackett, 2000. ISBN: 872205401 4. Meineck, Peter, trans., Aeschylus Oresteia, Hackett, 1998. ISBN: 0872203905 5. Roche, Paul, trans., Three Plays of Euripides: Alcestis, Medea, the Bacchae, W.W. Norton and Company, 1974. ISBN: 0393093123 6. Trzanowska, Anthology Of Classical Myth: Primary Sources in Translation, Hackett, 2004. ISBN: 0872207218, Recommended Texts: 1. Kirkwood, A Short Guide to Classical Mythology, Bolchazy-Carducci. 1995. ISBN 086516309X These books are all available through both the campus bookstore as well as online. You are encouraged to save money on the books for this course. However, please DO NOT use other translations; you will need these editions to participate in class discussions. Some supplementary reading assignments will also be given to you by way of (online) handouts. Other useful works:

1) If you are having difficulty locating the places mentioned in our readings, the Interactive Ancient Mediterranean (URL= http://iam.classics.unc.edu). 2) If you would like to know more about an author, concept, issue, historical question mentioned in our class, the best reference work on the ancient world, the Oxford Classical Dictionary, is available at no cost to you at McKeldin. Course Requirements: This course requires regular reading and learning of plots, characters, ideas, and ways of analyzing major works of Greek and Roman literature. The reading load is moderately heavy, and the course requires substantial writing in the form of essays on examinations and regular written discussions. Final Examination: There will be a final examination that will include both objective and essay components. This test will cover the material in the assigned readings AND points we have discussed in class. You are responsible for material presented to you in lectures and discussions and on handouts as well as for material from the assigned readings. Discussion: As this is a course where our stated goal is to discover what myth means to us in the modern world, your input is critical. Twice a week, you will be expected to: 1) Respond to the prompt given in the discussion area. This initial response should be in the neighborhood of 250 words. 2) Respond to two other students in a thoughtful way. Short remarks will not do. If you disagree with your classmate(s), use evidence from the reading or my online lecture to back up your position. Summary of Grades for CLAS 170: 35%: Discussion 10%: Quizzes 30%: Tests 25%: Final Examination Grading Scale: A+ =97-100% C+ =77-79% A =93-97% C =73-76% A- =90-92% C- =70-72% B+ =87-89% D+ =67-69% B =83-86% D =63-66% B- =80-82% F =0-59% Attendance: Students are expected to attend all classes unless an acceptable excuse (i.e. illness accompanied by a doctor s note, family emergency, school-sponsored extracurricular event, etc.) is provided. Students who do not comply with this policy do

so at the peril of their own average in this class as participation, quizzes, and weekly writing assignments are worth 20% of a student s total grade in CLAS 170. Academic Integrity: All students will be expected to adhere to the University of Maryland s code of academic integrity as it is set forth at http://www.shc.umd.edu/code.html. Students who are caught in the act of cheating or who plagiarize will be referred to the administration and to the Office of Student Conduct. Schedule of Readings and Topics (subject to revision at the instructor s discretion) Week One Watch: Lectures: What is Mythology? The gods of Classical Greece: polytheism and Greek culture. Historical background/ An Introduction to the Authors/ An Introduction to the Greek Pantheon/ The Greek conception of the roles of gods and men. Read: Hesiod s Theogony, Lines 105-210 (pp.134-138), 456-725 (pp. 144-152), and 826-885 (pp.154-156) in the Anthology of Classical Myth. -Read also Hesiod s Works and Days (pp. 160-167) in the Anthology Of Classical Myth. -Genesis Chapters 1, 2, and 3 (handout). - Niobe story in The Metamorphoses of Ovid (handout) Discuss: How is the world created in Hesiod s Theogony? How is it created in Genesis? -In Hesiod s Theogony, how are the relationships between mothers, fathers, and sons different than they are in our own society? How are they the same? Explore each set of relationships individually. -In Ovid s Metamorphoses, how does the story of Niobe illustrate the maxim Nothing in excess? How does it illustrate Know yourself? What does this story imply about human beings relationship to the gods and proper human behavior? -Be on the lookout for the following characters: Gaia, Ouranos, Rheia, Kronos, Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, Hades, Athena, Aphrodite, Ares, Hephaistos, Demeter, Hestia, Hermes, Apollo, Prometheus, Epimetheus, Pandora Watch: Lectures: Mankind s relationship with the gods/ Archaeology and its relationship with mythology/ Oral Poetry and the Homeric mythoi/µύθοι. The Iliad and the Epic Cycle. Read: Iliad, books 1-6, 9, and 11 (pp. 1-82, 92-121) in The Essential Homer)

Discuss: What does the first scene of book 4 reveal about the relationships between gods and mortals? What kinds of details does Homer focus on in his descriptions of the battle? What opinion do you think the author has of war? Week Two Watch: Lecture: What s Wrong with Troy?/ Just what kind of people are these Greeks?(part 2)/ Read: Iliad, books 14, 15, 16, 18, 19, 21, 22, and 24 (pp. 134-195, 199-221, and 230-240 in The Essential Homer) Discuss: What is your reaction to Achilles aristeia/α ριστεία as he returns to combat in books 19, 21, and 22? In other words, is Achilles the good guy to which you have grown accustomed in movies like The Dark Knight Rises and Spiderman or is he something altogether different? How do you think Homer expected his original audience to respond to it? Why is the shield of Achilles described at such length? Test 1: Genesis, Hesiod, Homer, and Ovid Watch: Lecture: Homer s Odyssey and the return (nostos/νόστος) of the hero. /Odysseus, the man of many ways. / Odysseus and the reinvention of the Homeric hero. Read: Odyssey, books 1, 4, 5, 6, 8, and 9 (pp. 241-314 in The Essential Homer) AND Proclus on the end of the Trojan War (pp.380-382 in the Anthology of Classical Myth) Week Three Watch: Lecture: The nostos of Odysseus: A comedic epic/ Other perspectives on the story of the Trojan War Read: Odyssey, books 10, 11, 12, 21, 22, and 24 (lines 213-end) (pp. 314-365, 423-453, 472-482 in The Essential Homer) Discuss: What makes civilization civilized, according to Homer? In other words, what kinds of things to people do that make us better than the monsters Odysseus encounters on his journey? Use books 10, 11, and 12 as your evidence. Watch: Lecture: The Hero Pattern (part 1: Herakles)/ The Hero Pattern (part 2: Perseus)/ The Hero Pattern (part 3: Theseus) Read: TBA Discuss: TBA Week Four

Watch: Lecture Goat Songs: Greek Tragedy in Context/The Eumenides and the rise of Athenian jurisprudence. / Seeing and Not Seeing: Oedipus the King Read: The Eumenides (ALL) in Aeschylus I: Oresteia Oedipus the King by Sophocles in The Three Theban Plays pp. 155-249. Discuss: What are the essential questions of The Eumenides and Oedipus Tyrranus? What are their theses? Watch: Lecture: Antigone: Ancient Perspectives on Religion, the State and Family/ The Hero Pattern (part 4: Jason) Medea and Greek concepts of foreigners. Film Screening: Run Lola Run Discussion: Religion vs. Rule of Law / Medea: Tragic Figure or Anti-Hero? Read: Antigone by Sophocles in The Three Theban Plays pp. 55-128 -Medea by Euripides in Three Plays of Euripides pp. 33-77 -Apollodorus on Jason in (pp. 25-30 in The Anthology of Classical Myth) -Ovid, Medea to Jason in the Anthology Of Classical Myth, pp. 322-328. Discuss: How does the film Run Lola Run demonstrate the terms heros, hamartia, peripeteia, gnosis, and catharsis. Based your knowledge of Aristotle s definition of the word tragedy, is this film a tragedy? If so, who is the tragic hero? Week Five Watch: Lecture: The Life and Times of Dionysos/ ιονυσος and the Crossing of Boundaries in Euripides The Bacchae/ Religion vs. Rule of Law 2: Dionysus and King Pentheus in the Bacchae. Read: Apollodorus M4 pp. 48-49, Homeric Hymn to Dionysos, pg. 203 -Horace Odes 2.19, pp. 212-213,in the Anthology Of Classical Myth -The Bacchae in Three Plays of Euripides pp. 78-126. Discuss: Why does King Pentheus deny that Dionysus is divine? What reasons might he have for fearing the introduction of this new god? How does Euripides portrayal of religion differ from that of Sophocles? Test 2: Aeschylus, Apollodorus, Euripides, Homer, Proclus, Sophocles, Run Lola Run, and Statius,

Watch: Lecture: The Aeneid: Vergil s Perspective on Epic Literature/ The Greeks and the Romans, a Love/Hate Relationship/The Romans and the other : The foreign woman in Greek and Roman literature. Read: The Aeneid: Books 1, 2, 4, and 6 Discuss: By giving the Trojans, the losers of the Trojan War, the starring role in his Roman national epic, Vergil has created a problem for himself. How can he portray the Trojans, the ancestors of the Romans, as noble and heroic even though they were beaten by the Greeks? We first meet Aeneas in Book 1 in a distinctly un-heroic posture, about to be shipwrecked at sea and wishing that he had died at Troy. Does Aeneas' account of the sack of Troy in Book 2 paint Aeneas in a more heroic light? Does Aeneas seem like a Homeric hero? How does Vergil compare Aeneas to Achilles? Write: a 1-page typed essay explaining how Dido resembles at least four different mythological characters whom we have studied. At least one of your examples should be drawn from Greek epic and at least one should be drawn from Greek tragedy. Week Six Due 11:59 P.M., Sun., July 12 th Watch: Lecture: The Aristeia of Aeneas/ Pietas et Furor in Vergil s Aeneid II Read: Aeneid Books 7, 8, 10, 11 (632-end), and 12 - Read also: Livy s Ab Urbe Condita (handout) Study Questions: Have we encountered any women like Camilla (book 11) in our past readings? Does she have any counterpart in the Iliad? Why would Vergil have inserted a character into his narrative that was a brave Italian woman? -Is Livy s approach to the stories of ancient Rome essentially historical or mythological? That is, does he seek out evidence or alternative possibilities for the actions that take place in the stories he tells or does he take the stories at face value? Discuss: What is the difference between the shield presented to Aeneas by his mother in book 8 of the Aeneid and that given to Achilles by his mother in book 18 of the Iliad? FINAL EXAMINATION