| University of Massachusetts Boston | ||
Graduate Course OfferingsGraduate Courses in Latin
Latin 501: Cicero The focus of this course is on Cicero’s orations, with special attention to the Catilinarians and the Pro Caelio. The course will emphasize careful analysis of Cicero’s Latin style and the political, legal, and literary issues that arise from these works. Students will be introduced to relevant scholarly literature. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Latin 503: Roman Comedy This course focuses on readings in the comedies of Plautus and Terence. The course will entail intensive study of one representative play by each playwright; other plays will be read in English translation. Topics to be covered include: the influence of Menander and Greek new Comedy; the rise of a literary culture in second-century-BC Rome; and analysis of character, language, and plot. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Latin 510: Virgil This course focuses on readings in the works of Virgil, with primary emphasis on the Aeneid. Significant attention is paid to historical and cultural context, literary history and epic genre, Virgil’s poetic and patriotic programmes and poetic diction, as well as to secondary, scholarly literature. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Latin 515: Methods of Teaching the Latin Language This course focuses on the theory and practice of teaching Latin in the schools. Special emphasis is given to assessing the pedagogical approaches that have emerged in recent dceades and the textbooks they have produced. Thee will also be discussion of specific ways to integrate these approaches into the contemporary classroom. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Latin 520: Latin Letters This course offers a survey of the epistolary genre in Latin literature. Readings will focus on Cicero, Seneca and Pliny; short examples from Horace, Ovid, Fronto and Petrarch will also be included. Letters will be considered in their historical, social and literary contexts. Students will evaluate the structure, content and evolution of the genre. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Latin 525: Literature in the Age of Nero The Emperor Nero, despite his reputation for viciousness, presided over a literary renaissance in Rome of the first century AD. This course devotes attention to key figures in this renaissance, including Seneca, Petronius, Lucan, and Persius. Through extensive readings in selected Latin texts, students will find that literary, political and philosophical issues intersect. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Latin 530: Latin Love Poetry This course focuses on readings in the amatory poetry of Catullus, Horace, Virgil and the Roman elegists. Significant attention is paid to historical, philosophical, and cultural context, literary history and genre distinctions, an the love poets’ use of poetry to reflect their constructions of self and society. Students are introduced to relevant secondary, scholarly literature. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Latin 597: Special Topics This course offers intensive study of selected topics in Latin language and/or literature. Course content varies according to the topic, which will be announced prior to the advance pre-registration period. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits Classics 597: Special Topics This course offers intensive study of selected topics in Classical Humanities. Primary texts are read in English translation. Course content varies according to the topic, which will be announced prior to the advance pre-registration period. 3 Lect Hrs, 3 Credits |
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