Course Schedule
CLAS 401A – Early Christian Literature: Greek Texts
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course.
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Friesen, Courtney
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 17 / 30
CLAS 501A – Early Christian Literature: Greek Texts
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course. Graduate level requirements included a extended research papers drawing on appropriate levels of training in language, literature, and knowledge of the ancient world.
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course. Graduate level requirements included a extended research papers drawing on appropriate levels of training in language, literature, and knowledge of the ancient world.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Friesen, Courtney
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 17 / 30
LAT 201 – Intermediate Latin I
Review of Latin grammar with readings from prose writers.
Review of Latin grammar with readings from prose writers.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: unassigned
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 18 / 30
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: unassigned
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 18 / 30