Course Schedule

Course Term
Course Attributes
Spring 2025
CLAS

CLAS 116B – Word Roots: Science and Medical Terminology

This course will focus on the history and structure of words including the use of Greek and Latin roots in the formation of technical terms in medicine and the sciences. Elements of word formation (prefixes, suffixes, and bases) will be intensively studied so that the words can by systematically analyzed and broken down into their component parts. Excellent preparation for standardized tests such as the GMAT, GRE, LSAT, and MCAT.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
337 / 600
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 337 / 600
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
337 / 600
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 337 / 600

CLAS 150C1 – Pyramids and Mummies: The Pharaoh and Ancient Egyptian Society

Pyramids and Mummies focuses on the role of the pharaoh in ancient Egyptian Society and its portrayal in modern culture. It centers on the overarching question of how political rulers consolidate, exert, and maintain political power over their constituent populations. To do this, Pyramids and Mummies takes an interdisciplinary approach to Egyptian history, examining it from Natural Science, Social Science, Arts, and Humanities perspectives, assessing how Egyptian pharaohs utilized a diverse array of tactics to rule their kingdom. This course then moves from ancient to modern, analyzing the portrayal of ancient Egyptian kingship in the modern world, with a special focus on the ways in which issues of race, ethnicity, diversity, and equity are addressed in cinematic adaptations of ancient Egyptian culture and kingship. Upon completing this course, students will be able to critically analyze issues of political rule from a variety of disciplinary lenses, and synthesize these multifaceted strategies in clear, concise, and powerful written prose, and they will be able to address issues of race, equity, and inclusion in the reception and adaptation of ancient Egyptian culture.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
968 / 1000
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 968 / 1000
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
968 / 1000
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 968 / 1000

CLAS 160B1 – Meet the Ancients: Gateway to Greece and Rome

Journey into the past to discover the worlds of the ancient Greeks and Romans. From democracy and republicanism to literature, philosophy and art, the contributions of these two cultures serve as the foundation for much of what has been described as ""western"" culture. This course explores who these peoples were, how these civilizations developed, what ideas and institutions they created, and why the Greeks and Romans matter today.

Through this exploration into the Greco-Roman world, this course builds connections between the multiple types of evidence that scholars draw upon to paint a picture of the ancient past. Close readings of texts provide a humanistic perspective on classical culture; archaeological data inform us about social scientific trends in demography and economics; environmental evidence from ice cores, botanical remains, and soil samples enable a natural science perspective on the past; and some of the world's most famous objects--from the Venus di Milo to Grecian vases--allow for artistic insights. In this course, students will evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of each disciplinary approach to understanding the past, and ultimately weave together multiple strands of evidence to create their signature assignment.

Upon completing "Meet the Ancients", students will not only have a better understanding of Greco-Roman history and culture, they will, above all, have a deeper understanding of the different perspectives used to approach ancient history and the skills to evaluate and synthesize diverse types of evidence.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
164 / 230
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 164 / 230

CLAS 160D2 – Classical Mythology: Ancient Stories and What they Tell Us

The myths, legends, and folktales of the Greeks, Romans and the peoples of the ancient Near East have remained popular for thousands of years. Together we'll not only learn about these stories themselves, but also think about why these stories are so popular, where they came from, and what insights they give us into the various people and cultures who created and reinterpreted them across the millennia.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
204 / 230
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 204 / 230
Section
002
Days
MoWeFr
Time
12:00 PM - 12:50 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
79 / 200
  • Days: MoWeFr
  • Time: 12:00 PM - 12:50 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 79 / 200

CLAS 205 – Ancient History: Roman History

This course offers a survey of Roman History from the prehistoric settlements in the area of the Seven Hills to the deterioration of the western Empire in the fifth century C.E. Special topics of interest include the material culture of the Roman world; the use of images in the pursuit of political agendas; classical notions of the divine; and concepts of gender, power, and identity. Popular representations of ancient Rome, specifically in film, will provide another area of consideration for comparison throughout the semester.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
27 / 30
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 27 / 30

CLAS 301B – The Literature of the Ancient Romans: Latin Literature in English Translation

Classics 301B provides an introductory survey of Latin literature through English translations. The works to be studied include some of the earliest extant ones of the republican period down to those of the mid-empire: our authors span a period of over 300 years. We will read from a variety of genres, including comedy and tragedy, epic and lyric poetry, didactic literature, satire, historiography, the novel, letters, and philosophy. Latin writers appropriated all these genres- with the exception of satire, which apparently is a Roman innovation (satura quidem tota nostra est, Quintilian 10.1.93)-from the Greeks. In doing so they creatively and self-reflexively (Latin literature is extremely "meta") adapted their Greek source texts with a view to their own audiences and artistic purposes. The study of this literature provides a dynamic point of entry into the rich and diverse cultural world of the ancient Romans-the Roman empire was an extraordinarily complex experiment in multiethnic and polylingual exchange that is only now being rivaled by globalist movements. Latin literature is also critical to appreciation of subsequent European literatures and cultures.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
14 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 14 / 30

CLAS 303 – Crime and Punishment in the Ancient World

This course explores the history of criminal justice systems in the ancient Mediterranean through close examination of select primary sources. Its primary focus is Greece and Rome, but it will also cover Pharaonic Egypt and the Ancient Near East. We shall move chronologically, geographically, and topically, treating a broad range of literary and archaeological evidence. Of central importance to the course will be the issue of boundaries: between right and wrong, imprisonment and freedom, individual and state. Law codes from Mesopotamia, tomb robbery in the Egyptian New Kingdom, the trial and execution of Socrates, police in the streets of Rome, execution by gladiator, spiritual and allegorical punishment: the course encompasses it all!

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
21 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 21 / 30

CLAS 305 – Greek and Roman Religion

Religious beliefs and cult practices in ancient Greece and Rome. All readings in English.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Status
Closed
Enrollment
503 / 500
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 503 / 500
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Status
Closed
Enrollment
503 / 500
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 503 / 500

CLAS 313 – Health and Medicine in Classical Antiquity

The course examines the mythology and practice of medicine in Greek and Roman times from Asclepius to Hippocrates and Galen, medical instruments and procedures, the religious manifestation of healing in Greek and Roman sanctuaries, the votive dedications by patients and cured, midwifery and child care, public hygiene and diseases. The topics cover a large spectrum of the medical practice and public health in the ancient societies of Classical antiquity, as well as how ancient worldviews, including religion and religious practice, shaped health and medicine in Greek and Roman civilization.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
38 / 50
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 38 / 50
Section
002
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
38 / 50
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 38 / 50

CLAS 315 – Seven Wonders of Ancient Greece

This course takes a site-based approach to the history, culture, and archaeology of ancient Greece. Throughout this class, you will journey to seven of Greece's most famous and historically influential archaeological sites. These sites will serve as a launching point for you to gain an understanding of Greece's historical trajectory, from the rise of Bronze Age citadels at sites like Mycenae to the creation of democracy in the Athenian Agora. You will also gain an understanding of some of Greece's fundamental cultural institutions: investigating athletics at the stadium of Olympia, religion at the Temple of Apollo of Delphi, and medicine at the sanctuary of Asclepius at Epidaurus.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
618 / 700
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 618 / 700
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
618 / 700
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 618 / 700

CLAS 323 – Ancient Empires

During this class, we will be exploring the diverse nations of the Mediterranean that pursued the acquisition of empire in the ancient world: Pharaonic Egypt, Achaemenid Persia, 5th century Athens, 4th century Macedon, and Imperial Rome. More than only the respective "rise and fall" of each empire, we will examine how the rulers of each civilization depicted and justified their policies of conquest, how the pursuit of empire changed the cultures of these civilizations, and how each empire paved the way for the next. In the end, we will be learning how empires in general (mis)function, and how empires are justified to their participants, subjects, and enemies.

Section
001
Days
MoWeFr
Time
10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
86 / 100
  • Days: MoWeFr
  • Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 86 / 100

CLAS 329 – Art History of the Cinema

This course is based on research and practices about art, film, and popular culture in France, England, Germany, and particularly in America. The learning activities inspire students to critically analyzing and incorporating past and current art perspectives in the arts and their influence on cinema. It is expected that students demonstrate skillful analysis and the latter description of theoretical and pragmatic solutions related to ideologies, art movements, and technology involved with the development of cinematography, through learning about different cultures, including ancient Greece and Rome, as well as America, France, and Germany over the centuries.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
422 / 800
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 422 / 800

CLAS 338 – Introduction to Roman Art and Archaeology

This course provides an overview of the culture of ancient Rome beginning about 1000 BCE and ending with the so-called "Fall of Rome". It looks at some of the key people who played a role in Rome, from the time of the kings through the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire. It will also focus on the city of Rome itself, as well as Rome's expansion through Italy, the Mediterranean, and beyond.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
117 / 150
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 117 / 150
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
117 / 150
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 117 / 150

CLAS 342 – The Iliad, the Odyssey, and the Epic Tradition

CLAS 342 is a General Education Exploring Perspectives (Humanist) course carrying the Writing and World Cultures and Societies attributes. We will build a community of inquiry into Homeric literature and society using tools like close reading to examine the Homeric characters within the Iliad and Odyssey with a view to what forces--social, divine, individualistic, artistic--inform their thoughts and actions. We will draw parallels and examine contrasts between our own societies and that of the characters within the Iliad and Odyssey, and we will be assisted in these critical analyses by the work of modern scholars who have attempted to understand the world of Homer using interpretive tools like close reading and literary analysis. Students will be invited to use their own experiences as interpretive lenses through which to understand the world of Homer; conversely, students will also be invited to use the world of Homer to understand their own.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
28 / 40
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 28 / 40

CLAS 346 – Family Feuds: Re-Interpreting Greek Tragedy

In this course, students will examine ancient Greek tragedy both in its original context, and as it has been interpreted and re-interpreted in more modern times. They will combine historical, critical, and artistic perspectives to consider what tragedy was/is and what made/makes it moving, effective, and enduring. The course will spotlight one the great tragic themes, centering the stories of Agamemnon, Oedipus, or the Trojan War. Students will build upon their understanding of both ancient tragedy and modern receptions to conceptualize effective modern stagings and adaptations.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
25 / 28
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 25 / 28

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.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
18 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 18 / 30

CLAS 404B – History of Rome: The Empire through the Reign of Constantine the Great

The Empire through the reign of Constantine the Great.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
23 / 24
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 23 / 24

CLAS 404C – Cleopatra: Power, Passion, Propaganda

This course focuses on Cleopatra VII (69-30 BCE), the last ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt and one of the best-known women in history and a key powerbroker during a period of important political change, one with enduring repercussions for the western world. She has been, however, deliberately memorialized as a "romantic" agent, a deployer of "feminine wiles", whose gender and political toolbox rightly doomed her efforts to failure. Students will interrogate the process of transforming a historical individual into an object lesson, a trope of femininity, and a cinematic legend, unpacking the messages crafted for a range of audiences and purposes by multiple creators, including Cleopatra herself. We begin with the historical background of the Hellenistic period, cosmopolitan and multicultural, focusing especially on the dynamism of women in the ideology of royal power and as image-makers in their own right, developing special forms for female authority and female patronage. A number of earlier Cleopatras establish context and particular precedents, creating official personae to engage effective interactions with fundamental groups; these include the resilient Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra II (r. 175-116 BCE) and Cleopatra Thea, token in a dynastic alliance who became Great Queen of Syria, dominating the Seleucid throne for a generation. Students will then sift through the evidence for Cleopatra VII, both the contentious (and largely hostile) material for her Mediterranean activities as well as the Egyptian record that may represent the specific efforts of the queen herself, utilizing then-ancient symbol and ritual to assert her legitimate imperial authority and structure her collaboration with major stakeholders in the Nile realm. The last section of the course looks to the lingering memory of Cleopatra long after her death, closely examining images in drama, art, and film to explore how the story of Cleopatra has been crafted and recrafted to represent different "truths" about sex, power, and identity.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
27 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 27 / 30

CLAS 432 – Literary Translation as Classical Reception

This course examines the translation of classical (poetic) texts as a way of receiving these texts and rendering them accessible - and fresh - for new audiences. The course consists of five components: (1) an introduction to the field of Translation Studies; (2) diachronic study of some of the most influential writers on translation, i.e. from Cicero to 21st century theorists; (3) the translation and adaptation of Greek texts by Latin authors at the beginnings of Latin literature; (4) close study of selected Greek and Latin poetic texts against a selection of published translations of them in English; (5) translation practica.

Section
001
Days
Mo
Time
12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
4 / 20
  • Days: Mo
  • Time: 12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 4 / 20

CLAS 443 – Archaeology of Neolithic and Bronze Age Greece

This class will examine the archaeology of the Greek Mainland from the arrival of humans until the end of the Late Bronze Age, paying particular attention to the emergence and florescence of Europe's first states. In addition to learning the material record of the region, students will hone their skills in critical thinking by exploring the theoretical approaches that inform the way archaeologists reconstruct the past.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
23 / 30
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 23 / 30

CLAS 465 – Greek Pottery: Craft and Society in Ancient Greece

This course surveys the development of ancient Greek pottery from c. 3000 to 400 BCE, with a focus on the period 1200-400 BCE (Mycenaean-Late Classical). Topics to be addressed include stylistic and typological developments, uses of ceramics within historical settings, iconography and meaning, materials and manufacturing techniques, organization of ceramic workshops, and potters and their social status. Key goals of the course include gaining an appreciation for the great importance of pottery in establishing and verifying the foundations of chronology in Greek archaeology as well as illuminating fundamental aspects of Greek society and culture. Opportunities for hands-on experiences in UA ceramics labs and museum collections will be available.

Section
001
Days
Th, Tu
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Closed
Enrollment
30 / 30
  • Days: Th, Tu
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 30 / 30

CLAS 472A – Ancient Philosophy

A philosophical introduction to the major works of Plato.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
31 / 40
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 31 / 40
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
31 / 40
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 31 / 40

CLAS 491 – Preceptorship

Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of instruction and practice in actual service in a department, program, or discipline. Requires faculty member approval, preceptor application on file with department.

Section
001
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Closed
Enrollment
0 / 0
  • +
  • Section: 001
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 0 / 0

CLAS 498H – Honors Thesis

An honors thesis is required of all the students graduating with honors. Students ordinarily sign up for this course as a two-semester sequence. The first semester the student performs research under the supervision of a faculty member; the second semester the student writes an honors thesis.

Section
001
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Closed
Enrollment
2 / 2
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 2 / 2
Section
004
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Closed
Enrollment
0 / 0
  • +
  • Section: 004
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 0 / 0
Section
005
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Closed
Enrollment
0 / 0
  • +
  • Section: 005
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 0 / 0
Section
008
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Closed
Enrollment
0 / 0
  • +
  • Section: 008
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 0 / 0

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.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
18 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 18 / 30

CLAS 504C – Cleopatra: Power, Passion, Propaganda

This course focuses on Cleopatra VII (69-30 BCE), the last ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt and one of the best-known women in history and a key powerbroker during a period of important political change, one with enduring repercussions for the western world. She has been, however, deliberately memorialized as a "romantic" agent, a deployer of "feminine wiles", whose gender and political toolbox rightly doomed her efforts to failure. Students will interrogate the process of transforming a historical individual into an object lesson, a trope of femininity, and a cinematic legend, unpacking the messages crafted for a range of audiences and purposes by multiple creators, including Cleopatra herself. We begin with the historical background of the Hellenistic period, cosmopolitan and multicultural, focusing especially on the dynamism of women in the ideology of royal power and as image-makers in their own right, developing special forms for female authority and female patronage. A number of earlier Cleopatras establish context and particular precedents, creating official personae to engage effective interactions with fundamental groups; these include the resilient Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra II (r. 175-116 BCE) and Cleopatra Thea, token in a dynastic alliance who became Great Queen of Syria, dominating the Seleucid throne for a generation. Students will then sift through the evidence for Cleopatra VII, both the contentious (and largely hostile) material for her Mediterranean activities as well as the Egyptian record that may represent the specific efforts of the queen herself, utilizing then-ancient symbol and ritual to assert her legitimate imperial authority and structure her collaboration with major stakeholders in the Nile realm. The last section of the course looks to the lingering memory of Cleopatra long after her death, closely examining images in drama, art, and film to explore how the story of Cleopatra has been crafted and recrafted to represent different "truths" about sex, power, and identity.

Graduate-level requirements include two short in-class presentations on particular aspects of course material; weekly responses to the assigned reading, focusing on modern scholarship; and a 5000-word final paper, comparative in nature.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
27 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 27 / 30

CLAS 532 – Literary Translation as Classical Reception

This course examines the translation of classical (poetic) texts as a way of receiving these texts and rendering them accessible - and fresh - for new audiences. The course consists of five components: (1) an introduction to the field of Translation Studies; (2) diachronic study of some of the most influential writers on translation, i.e. from Cicero to 21st century theorists; (3) the translation and adaptation of Greek texts by Latin authors at the beginnings of Latin literature; (4) close study of selected Greek and Latin poetic texts against a selection of published translations of them in English; (5) translation practica. Graduate level requirements include readings in both Greek & Latin, an oral report, and more extensive practica.

Section
001
Days
Mo
Time
12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
4 / 20
  • Days: Mo
  • Time: 12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 4 / 20

CLAS 543 – Archaeology of Neolithic and Bronze Age Greece

This class will examine the archaeology of the Greek Mainland from the arrival of humans until the end of the Late Bronze Age, paying particular attention to the emergence and florescence of Europe's first states. In addition to learning the material record of the region, students will hone their skills in critical thinking by exploring the theoretical approaches that inform the way archaeologists reconstruct the past.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
23 / 30
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 23 / 30

CLAS 565 – Greek Pottery: Craft and Society in Ancient Greece

This course surveys the development of ancient Greek pottery from c. 3000 to 400 BCE, with a focus on the period 1200-400 BCE (Mycenaean-Late Classical). Topics to be addressed include stylistic and typological developments, uses of ceramics within historical settings, iconography and meaning, materials and manufacturing techniques, organization of ceramic workshops, and potters and their social status. Key goals of the course include gaining an appreciation for the great importance of pottery in establishing and verifying the foundations of chronology in Greek archaeology as well as illuminating fundamental aspects of Greek society and culture. Opportunities for hands-on experiences in UA ceramics labs and museum collections will be available. Graduate-level requirements include extensive readings and an in-depth paper.

Section
001
Days
Th, Tu
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Closed
Enrollment
30 / 30
  • Days: Th, Tu
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Closed
  • Enrollment: 30 / 30

CLAS 587 – Assessment in Second/Foreign Language Learning

The primary objective of this course is the development of language teachers' assessment literacy, which includes knowledge of key assessment principles and skill in creating or adopting assessment tools and procedures for the language classroom. Participants in this course will develop their knowledge and skills related to assessing all skill areas in the language classroom, including productive skills (writing, speaking), receptive skills (reading, listening), and assessing grammar and vocabulary. Grading and student evaluation will also be important topics of consideration and exploration in this course. Designed specifically for in-service (and pre-service) language teachers, the course combines theory with practice by covering essential principles of effective classroom assessment and the development of effective assessment tools for classroom use. Participants completing this course will become more assessment literate and better able to evaluate student performance in their classrooms fairly and effectively.

Section
001
Days
Mo
Time
03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
22 / 25
  • Days: Mo
  • Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 22 / 25
GRK

GRK 102 – Elementary Classical Greek II

The second semester of the introduction to the basic morphology, grammar, syntax, and vocabulary of ancient Greek through reading and composition for students of the Bible and of classical authors.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
5 / 18
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 5 / 18

GRK 202 – Intermediate Classical Greek II

Selections from classical Greek poetry.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
11 / 18
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 11 / 18

GRK 424 – Advanced Greek: Homer

Close reading of selections from the Iliad and Odyssey in Greek and an introduction to the critical secondary literature.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
11 / 22
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 11 / 22

GRK 524 – Advanced Greek: Homer

Close reading of selections from the Iliad and Odyssey in Greek and an introduction to the critical secondary literature. Graduate-level requirements include extensive reading and an in-depth paper.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
11 / 22
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 11 / 22
LAT

LAT 101 – Elementary Latin I

An introduction to the basic morphology, syntax and vocabulary of Latin through reading and composition.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
61 / 75
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 61 / 75
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
61 / 75
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 61 / 75

LAT 102 – Elementary Latin II

A second semester introduction to the basic morphology, syntax and vocabulary of Latin through reading and composition.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
19 / 25
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 19 / 25
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
54 / 75
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 54 / 75
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
54 / 75
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 54 / 75

LAT 201 – Intermediate Latin I

Review of Latin grammar with readings from prose writers.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
20 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 20 / 30
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jan 15 - Mar 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
20 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 20 / 30

LAT 202 – Intermediate Latin II

Review of Latin grammar with readings from the poetry of Virgil's Aeneid.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
9 / 20
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 9 / 20
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
31 / 40
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 31 / 40
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Mar 17 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
31 / 40
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 31 / 40

LAT 413 – Augustan Literature

Readings from a major writer or writers of the Augustan age.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
19 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 19 / 30

LAT 513 – Augustan Literature

Readings from a major writer or writers of the Augustan age. Graduate level requirements include extensive reading and a research paper.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
Date
Jan 15 - May 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
19 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
  • Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 19 / 30
Fall 2025
CLAS

CLAS 116B – Word Roots: Science and Medical Terminology

This course will focus on the history and structure of words including the use of Greek and Latin roots in the formation of technical terms in medicine and the sciences. Elements of word formation (prefixes, suffixes, and bases) will be intensively studied so that the words can by systematically analyzed and broken down into their component parts. Excellent preparation for standardized tests such as the GMAT, GRE, LSAT, and MCAT.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • +
  • Section: 101
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • +
  • Section: 201
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300

CLAS 150C1 – Pyramids and Mummies: The Pharaoh and Ancient Egyptian Society

Pyramids and Mummies focuses on the role of the pharaoh in ancient Egyptian Society and its portrayal in modern culture. It centers on the overarching question of how political rulers consolidate, exert, and maintain political power over their constituent populations. To do this, Pyramids and Mummies takes an interdisciplinary approach to Egyptian history, examining it from Natural Science, Social Science, Arts, and Humanities perspectives, assessing how Egyptian pharaohs utilized a diverse array of tactics to rule their kingdom. This course then moves from ancient to modern, analyzing the portrayal of ancient Egyptian kingship in the modern world, with a special focus on the ways in which issues of race, ethnicity, diversity, and equity are addressed in cinematic adaptations of ancient Egyptian culture and kingship. Upon completing this course, students will be able to critically analyze issues of political rule from a variety of disciplinary lenses, and synthesize these multifaceted strategies in clear, concise, and powerful written prose, and they will be able to address issues of race, equity, and inclusion in the reception and adaptation of ancient Egyptian culture.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 1000
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 1000
Section
102
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 1000
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 1000
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 1000
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 1000

CLAS 160B1 – Meet the Ancients: Gateway to Greece and Rome

Journey into the past to discover the worlds of the ancient Greeks and Romans. From democracy and republicanism to literature, philosophy and art, the contributions of these two cultures serve as the foundation for much of what has been described as ""western"" culture. This course explores who these peoples were, how these civilizations developed, what ideas and institutions they created, and why the Greeks and Romans matter today.

Through this exploration into the Greco-Roman world, this course builds connections between the multiple types of evidence that scholars draw upon to paint a picture of the ancient past. Close readings of texts provide a humanistic perspective on classical culture; archaeological data inform us about social scientific trends in demography and economics; environmental evidence from ice cores, botanical remains, and soil samples enable a natural science perspective on the past; and some of the world's most famous objects--from the Venus di Milo to Grecian vases--allow for artistic insights. In this course, students will evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of each disciplinary approach to understanding the past, and ultimately weave together multiple strands of evidence to create their signature assignment.

Upon completing "Meet the Ancients", students will not only have a better understanding of Greco-Roman history and culture, they will, above all, have a deeper understanding of the different perspectives used to approach ancient history and the skills to evaluate and synthesize diverse types of evidence.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 230
  • +
  • Section: 001
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 230

CLAS 160D2 – Classical Mythology: Ancient Stories and What they Tell Us

The myths, legends, and folktales of the Greeks, Romans and the peoples of the ancient Near East have remained popular for thousands of years. Together we'll not only learn about these stories themselves, but also think about why these stories are so popular, where they came from, and what insights they give us into the various people and cultures who created and reinterpreted them across the millennia.

Section
001
Days
MoWeFr
Time
10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 230
  • Days: MoWeFr
  • Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 230
Section
002
Days
TuTh
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 230
  • +
  • Section: 002
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 230
Section
003
Days
MoWe
Time
03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 230
  • +
  • Section: 003
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 230
Section
004
Days
TuTh
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 59
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 59
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300

CLAS 204 – Ancient History: Greek History

A political, social and cultural history of Greek civilization from the Bronze Age to the death of Alexander the Great.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 205 – Ancient History: Roman History

This course offers a survey of Roman History from the prehistoric settlements in the area of the Seven Hills to the deterioration of the western Empire in the fifth century C.E. Special topics of interest include the material culture of the Roman world; the use of images in the pursuit of political agendas; classical notions of the divine; and concepts of gender, power, and identity. Popular representations of ancient Rome, specifically in film, will provide another area of consideration for comparison throughout the semester.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 280 – Introduction to the Bible: New Testament

This course introduces students to the New Testament in light of the contexts in which it was written and compiled, and as a window into reconstructing the world of early Christianity. The course will also examine how various Christian communities have understood the meaning and authority of the New Testament.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300

CLAS 300 – The Classical Ideal: From Greece and Rome through the 1930s

This is a course that explores the world of ancient Athens and Rome as it was viewed and interpreted in later periods. The learning activities inspire students to critically analyze and incorporate past and current art, historical, archaeological and cultural perspectives on ancient Greek life and culture. Then we learn about how people in America in the 1930s were inspired by ancient Greece. Students are expected to apply their knowledge by analyzing movies made in this period which focus on presenting classical culture in modern guise, especially those by the only major woman director of the era: Dorothy Arzner. Next, we look at ancient Rome. Since Americans have traditionally identified more with ancient Rome, we dedicate more time to the analysis of Rome and its influence. Finally, we look at the 1930s' vogue for the symbolism of classical culture in Fascist Italy under Mussolini and in Nazi Germany under Hitler.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 300
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 300

CLAS 301A – The Literature of the Ancient Greeks: From Homer to the Novel

Survey of the major authors and works of ancient Greece: from Homer to the Greek novel. All readings in English.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 60
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 60

CLAS 305 – Greek and Roman Religion

Religious beliefs and cult practices in ancient Greece and Rome. All readings in English.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 500
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 500
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 500
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 500

CLAS 335 – The Roman Empire: Rulers and Ruled

In this course, we will examine Rome and its Empire from several points of view and across Roman history. During this semester we will deal with those who ruled the empire, and those who were ruled by the Emperors. Through this class, we will explore how Romans thought about their own rule, and how citizens, subjects, and outsiders reacted to (and against) the Roman Empire.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 90
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 90

CLAS 352 – Pirates, Witches, Barbarians, and True Love: The Ancient Novel

The most famous texts you've never heard of, the ancient Greek and Roman novels are a rich and diverse group of texts that arose somewhat suddenly from mysterious origins, and include formulaic tales of love, sex and marriage, travel to bizarre foreign lands, magical transformations, riddles, zombies, and debauchery. These stories have sometimes been looked on as texts of inferior quality, a topic we will reconsider together, but these novels also laid the groundwork for more modern novels, as well as the works of Cervantes and Shakespeare and films like The Princess Bride and Indiana Jones. This course will use a Humanists perspective to critically read, analyze, discuss, and formulate arguments about select Ancient Greek and Roman novels. We may also include reading and consideration of similar texts from other ancient societies and/or the receptions of these novels in subsequent literature. As we read, we will consider when novels become literature, what makes books good, how we define genre and how genre impacts our reading, as well as what fiction can teach us about the history of love, sex, social class, women, the body, religion, and magic.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 403A – History of Greece: Democracy, War, and Empire in the 5th Century BCE

Beginning with Herodotus' history of the Persian Wars and concluding with Thucydides' account of the Peloponnesian War, you will read and discuss various types of ancient sources in order to write your own history of the growth of democracy, the spread of empire, and the persistence of war in Classical Greece.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 404C – Cleopatra: Power, Passion, Propaganda

This course focuses on Cleopatra VII (69-30 BCE), the last ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt and one of the best-known women in history and a key powerbroker during a period of important political change, one with enduring repercussions for the western world. She has been, however, deliberately memorialized as a "romantic" agent, a deployer of "feminine wiles", whose gender and political toolbox rightly doomed her efforts to failure. Students will interrogate the process of transforming a historical individual into an object lesson, a trope of femininity, and a cinematic legend, unpacking the messages crafted for a range of audiences and purposes by multiple creators, including Cleopatra herself. We begin with the historical background of the Hellenistic period, cosmopolitan and multicultural, focusing especially on the dynamism of women in the ideology of royal power and as image-makers in their own right, developing special forms for female authority and female patronage. A number of earlier Cleopatras establish context and particular precedents, creating official personae to engage effective interactions with fundamental groups; these include the resilient Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra II (r. 175-116 BCE) and Cleopatra Thea, token in a dynastic alliance who became Great Queen of Syria, dominating the Seleucid throne for a generation. Students will then sift through the evidence for Cleopatra VII, both the contentious (and largely hostile) material for her Mediterranean activities as well as the Egyptian record that may represent the specific efforts of the queen herself, utilizing then-ancient symbol and ritual to assert her legitimate imperial authority and structure her collaboration with major stakeholders in the Nile realm. The last section of the course looks to the lingering memory of Cleopatra long after her death, closely examining images in drama, art, and film to explore how the story of Cleopatra has been crafted and recrafted to represent different "truths" about sex, power, and identity.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 24
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 24

CLAS 414 – Narrating Memory: The Greek and Roman Historians

This course will examine the histories written by ancient Greeks and Romans, as well as the broader questions of historiography. What did history mean to the ancients, and what techniques did they use to "bear witness" to the past? How do the writings of ancient historians inform our understanding of classical antiquity? Ancient Greek and Roman historians to be covered include Herodotus, Thucydides, Livy, and Tacitus.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
05:00 PM - 06:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 12
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 05:00 PM - 06:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 12

CLAS 446A – Mapping Ancient Cities

The course will introduce the student to the history, theory and archaeological evidence for city and landscape planning from the Minoan, Etruscan, Greek and Roman periods. In addition the course will consider some of the most modern techniques (digital cartography, remote sensing and GIS) in the study of ancient cities and will offer the student the opportunity to learn and practice a number of these modern techniques, including the use of AutoCAD.

Section
001
Days
Fr
Time
12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 15
  • Days: Fr
  • Time: 12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 15

CLAS 452 – Etruscan Art and Archaeology

This course surveys the art and archaeology of the Etruscan culture from the question of its origins in the Bronze Age to its absorption by the Romans in the first century A.D. Questions of DNA analysis and origin theory, art and architecture, history, interface with the Romans, diversity of individual cities, confederation centers and language will also be discussed.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 472A – Ancient Philosophy

A philosophical introduction to the major works of Plato.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 55
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 55
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 55
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 55

CLAS 474 – Archaeological Science

To fully explore and understand the ways that past civilizations and societies interacted with the environment, innovated, thrived or survived, we need a toolkit as diverse as the different aspects of human life. In this course, you will learn the basic principles behind the wide range of scientific techniques used to provide clues about the human past. Through a series of case studies from various times and places around the world you will gain an overview of how methods combine to reveal new insights and explore the potential, limitations and future directions for such work.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25

CLAS 491 – Preceptorship

Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of instruction and practice in actual service in a department, program, or discipline. Requires faculty member approval, preceptor application on file with department.

Section
001
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 3
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 3

CLAS 498H – Honors Thesis

An honors thesis is required of all the students graduating with honors. Students ordinarily sign up for this course as a two-semester sequence. The first semester the student performs research under the supervision of a faculty member; the second semester the student writes an honors thesis.

Section
001
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 1
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 1
Section
002
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 3
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 3
Section
003
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 3
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 3
Section
004
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 5
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 5
Section
005
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 3
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 3
Section
008
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 1
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 1

CLAS 504C – Cleopatra: Power, Passion, Propaganda

This course focuses on Cleopatra VII (69-30 BCE), the last ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt and one of the best-known women in history and a key powerbroker during a period of important political change, one with enduring repercussions for the western world. She has been, however, deliberately memorialized as a "romantic" agent, a deployer of "feminine wiles", whose gender and political toolbox rightly doomed her efforts to failure. Students will interrogate the process of transforming a historical individual into an object lesson, a trope of femininity, and a cinematic legend, unpacking the messages crafted for a range of audiences and purposes by multiple creators, including Cleopatra herself. We begin with the historical background of the Hellenistic period, cosmopolitan and multicultural, focusing especially on the dynamism of women in the ideology of royal power and as image-makers in their own right, developing special forms for female authority and female patronage. A number of earlier Cleopatras establish context and particular precedents, creating official personae to engage effective interactions with fundamental groups; these include the resilient Ptolemaic queen Cleopatra II (r. 175-116 BCE) and Cleopatra Thea, token in a dynastic alliance who became Great Queen of Syria, dominating the Seleucid throne for a generation. Students will then sift through the evidence for Cleopatra VII, both the contentious (and largely hostile) material for her Mediterranean activities as well as the Egyptian record that may represent the specific efforts of the queen herself, utilizing then-ancient symbol and ritual to assert her legitimate imperial authority and structure her collaboration with major stakeholders in the Nile realm. The last section of the course looks to the lingering memory of Cleopatra long after her death, closely examining images in drama, art, and film to explore how the story of Cleopatra has been crafted and recrafted to represent different "truths" about sex, power, and identity.

Graduate-level requirements include two short in-class presentations on particular aspects of course material; weekly responses to the assigned reading, focusing on modern scholarship; and a 5000-word final paper, comparative in nature.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 24
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 24

CLAS 510A – Methods in Classical Studies

Introduction to the various disciplines of classical scholarship: philology, textual criticism, paleography, papyrology, archaeology.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
08:30 AM - 09:45 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 12
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 08:30 AM - 09:45 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 12

CLAS 510B – Thesis Preparation

This course is an introduction to thesis writing for students enrolled in the Master of Arts degree program in Classics. Topics and/or assignments include forming a thesis committee, the review of scholarship, and developing a thesis writing plan, in addition to discussion of second-year issues such as applying for PhD programs and/or jobs in Classics.

Section
001
Days
Th
Time
01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 12
  • Days: Th
  • Time: 01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 12

CLAS 514 – Narrating Memory: The Greek and Roman Historians

This course will examine the histories written by ancient Greeks and Romans, as well as the broader questions of historiography. What did history mean to the ancients, and what techniques did they use to "bear witness" to the past? How do the writings of ancient historians inform our understanding of classical antiquity? Ancient Greek and Roman historians to be covered include Herodotus, Thucydides, Livy, and Tacitus.

Graduate-level requirements include the responsibility for reading large sections of the ancient authors in their original languages. There will be two language exams over these sections, during which graduate students will not only translate but provide limited commentary on the passage provided.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
05:00 PM - 06:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 12
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 05:00 PM - 06:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 12

CLAS 546A – Mapping Ancient Cities

The course will introduce the student to the history, theory and archaeological evidence for city and landscape planning from the Minoan, Etruscan, Greek and Roman periods. In addition the course will consider some of the most modern techniques (digital cartography, remote sensing and GIS) in the study of ancient cities and will offer the student the opportunity to learn and practice a number of these modern techniques, including the use of AutoCAD. Graduate-level requirements include making a 30 minute oral presentation to the class on the research project undertaken as a part of the requirements for the course. In addition, graduate students will be responsible for a 25 page paper.

Section
001
Days
Fr
Time
12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 15
  • Days: Fr
  • Time: 12:30 PM - 03:00 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 15

CLAS 552 – Etruscan Art and Archaeology

Surveys the art and archaeology of the Etruscans between the 7th and 1st centuries B.C. Graduate-level requirements include extensive reading and an in-depth paper.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 574 – Archaeological Science

To fully explore and understand the ways that past civilizations and societies interacted with the environment, innovated, thrived or survived, we need a toolkit as diverse as the different aspects of human life. In this course, you will learn the basic principles behind the wide range of scientific techniques used to provide clues about the human past. Through a series of case studies from various times and places around the world you will gain an overview of how methods combine to reveal new insights and explore the potential, limitations and future directions for such work.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
GRK

GRK 101 – Elementary Classical Greek I

Introduction to ancient Greek for students of the Bible and of the classical authors.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 28
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 28

GRK 201 – Intermediate Classical Greek I

Selections from Greek prose texts.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 20
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 20

GRK 402 – Greek Reading Course

Readings in major Greek authors including Homer, Plato, and the historians and dramatists.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 20
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 20

GRK 502 – Greek Reading Course

Readings in major Greek authors including Homer, Plato, and the historians and dramatists. Graduate-level requirements include extensive reading and an in-depth paper.

Section
001
Days
TuTh
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 20
  • Days: TuTh
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 20
LAT

LAT 101 – Elementary Latin I

An introduction to the basic morphology, syntax and vocabulary of Latin through reading and composition.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
09:00 AM - 09:50 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • +
  • Section: 001
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 09:00 AM - 09:50 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
002
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • +
  • Section: 002
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 50
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 50
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 50
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 50
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • +
  • Section: 201
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25

LAT 102 – Elementary Latin II

A second semester introduction to the basic morphology, syntax and vocabulary of Latin through reading and composition.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 50
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 50
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 50
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 50

LAT 201 – Intermediate Latin I

Review of Latin grammar with readings from prose writers.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeTh
Time
10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • +
  • Section: 001
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days: MoTuWeTh
  • Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • +
  • Section: 101
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Aug 25 - Oct 15
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • +
  • Section: 201
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Oct 15
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

LAT 202 – Intermediate Latin II

Review of Latin grammar with readings from the poetry of Virgil's Aeneid.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • +
  • Section: 101
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Oct 16 - Dec 10
Instructor
unassigned
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • +
  • Section: 201
  • Instructor: unassigned
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Oct 16 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

LAT 400 – Prose of the Roman Republic

Extended readings from Sallust, Cicero and Caesar with some grammatical review; development of skills in rapid readings and sight reading.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 15
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 15

LAT 401 – Latin Reading Course

Readings in one of the following: epic, lyric, drama, history, oratory, satire, epistles, novel, philosophical, technical or medieval literature.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 20
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 20

LAT 501 – Latin Reading Course

Readings in one of the following: epic, lyric, drama, history, oratory, satire, epistles, novel, philosophical, technical or medieval literature. Graduate-level requirements include extensive reading and a research paper.

Section
001
Days
MoWe
Time
02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 20
  • Days: MoWe
  • Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 20

LAT 579 – Second/Foreign Language Teaching and Learning

This class is intended to prepare students to teach a second/foreign language. It will provide students with the essential foundations in language teaching methodology and theory, pedagogical grammar, curriculum and materials development, classroom management, and formal and informal assessment techniques. In addition, students will gain practical knowledge through video practicum components, which allow them to watch and reflect on actual classroom teaching. Students will complete this program with the pedagogical knowledge and practical understanding necessary to be confident and effective language teachers.

Section
002
Days
We
Time
04:00 PM - 06:30 PM
Date
Aug 25 - Dec 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 15
  • Days: We
  • Time: 04:00 PM - 06:30 PM
  • Dates: Aug 25 - Dec 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 15
Summer 2025
CLAS

CLAS 116B – Word Roots: Science and Medical Terminology

This course will focus on the history and structure of words including the use of Greek and Latin roots in the formation of technical terms in medicine and the sciences. Elements of word formation (prefixes, suffixes, and bases) will be intensively studied so that the words can by systematically analyzed and broken down into their component parts. Excellent preparation for standardized tests such as the GMAT, GRE, LSAT, and MCAT.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25

CLAS 150C1 – Pyramids and Mummies: The Pharaoh and Ancient Egyptian Society

Pyramids and Mummies focuses on the role of the pharaoh in ancient Egyptian Society and its portrayal in modern culture. It centers on the overarching question of how political rulers consolidate, exert, and maintain political power over their constituent populations. To do this, Pyramids and Mummies takes an interdisciplinary approach to Egyptian history, examining it from Natural Science, Social Science, Arts, and Humanities perspectives, assessing how Egyptian pharaohs utilized a diverse array of tactics to rule their kingdom. This course then moves from ancient to modern, analyzing the portrayal of ancient Egyptian kingship in the modern world, with a special focus on the ways in which issues of race, ethnicity, diversity, and equity are addressed in cinematic adaptations of ancient Egyptian culture and kingship. Upon completing this course, students will be able to critically analyze issues of political rule from a variety of disciplinary lenses, and synthesize these multifaceted strategies in clear, concise, and powerful written prose, and they will be able to address issues of race, equity, and inclusion in the reception and adaptation of ancient Egyptian culture.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
131
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100

CLAS 160D2 – Classical Mythology: Ancient Stories and What they Tell Us

The myths, legends, and folktales of the Greeks, Romans and the peoples of the ancient Near East have remained popular for thousands of years. Together we'll not only learn about these stories themselves, but also think about why these stories are so popular, where they came from, and what insights they give us into the various people and cultures who created and reinterpreted them across the millennia.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
131
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100

CLAS 202 – Myths, Legends, and Religion: Foundational Literature of the European Visual World

This literature course examines Greek and Roman classical myths and Jewish and Christian biblical stories that have frequently been represented in visual cultures over the centuries in Europe and beyond. When taught as part of a study abroad trip, the course will be customized to provide the literary background of the specific visual material students will view while abroad.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeThFr
Time
10:45 AM - 12:30 PM
Date
May 25 - Jun 27
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 20
  • Days: MoTuWeThFr
  • Time: 10:45 AM - 12:30 PM
  • Dates: May 25 - Jun 27
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 20
Section
001
Days
MoTuWeThFr
Time
10:45 AM - 12:30 PM
Date
May 25 - Jun 27
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 20
  • Days: MoTuWeThFr
  • Time: 10:45 AM - 12:30 PM
  • Dates: May 25 - Jun 27
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 20

CLAS 204 – Ancient History: Greek History

A political, social and cultural history of Greek civilization from the Bronze Age to the death of Alexander the Great.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jul 3
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jul 3
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jul 3
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jul 3
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 205 – Ancient History: Roman History

This course offers a survey of Roman History from the prehistoric settlements in the area of the Seven Hills to the deterioration of the western Empire in the fifth century C.E. Special topics of interest include the material culture of the Roman world; the use of images in the pursuit of political agendas; classical notions of the divine; and concepts of gender, power, and identity. Popular representations of ancient Rome, specifically in film, will provide another area of consideration for comparison throughout the semester.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 7 - Aug 22
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 7 - Aug 22
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 7 - Aug 22
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 30
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 7 - Aug 22
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 30

CLAS 240 – Ancient Athletics

This course investigates athletics, sport, and spectacle in ancient Greece and Rome. From the birth of the ancient Olympics in the early days of archaic Greece, to the blood in the arena of the Roman gladiatorial games, this course looks at the ways in which ancient athletics articulate with the societies and cultures of the Classical world.

Through this exploration of ancient Greek sport and ancient Roman spectacle, this course builds connections across the humanities, social sciences, and arts. Students analyze how ancient athletics, and the evidence for it, can be studied from various perspectives, each providing their own strengths, weaknesses, and unique insights. Students use a humanist lens to conduct close readings to look at the roll of sport within Classical literature; they employ social scientific model building to construct economic models for the Panhellenic games; and they leverage an artistic perspective to consider the messages sent by portrayals of athletes on Panathenaic vases and in Greco-Roman Sculpture.

Upon completing "Ancient Athletics", students will not only have a better understanding of sport and spectacle in ancient Greece and Rome, they will have a deeper understanding of the different perspectives used to approach ancient history and the skills to evaluate and synthesize diverse types of evidence.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
131
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100

CLAS 280 – Introduction to the Bible: New Testament

This course introduces students to the New Testament in light of the contexts in which it was written and compiled, and as a window into reconstructing the world of early Christianity. The course will also examine how various Christian communities have understood the meaning and authority of the New Testament.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100

CLAS 305 – Greek and Roman Religion

Religious beliefs and cult practices in ancient Greece and Rome. All readings in English.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100

CLAS 315 – Seven Wonders of Ancient Greece

This course takes a site-based approach to the history, culture, and archaeology of ancient Greece. Throughout this class, you will journey to seven of Greece's most famous and historically influential archaeological sites. These sites will serve as a launching point for you to gain an understanding of Greece's historical trajectory, from the rise of Bronze Age citadels at sites like Mycenae to the creation of democracy in the Athenian Agora. You will also gain an understanding of some of Greece's fundamental cultural institutions: investigating athletics at the stadium of Olympia, religion at the Temple of Apollo of Delphi, and medicine at the sanctuary of Asclepius at Epidaurus.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 100
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 100

CLAS 338 – Introduction to Roman Art and Archaeology

This course provides an overview of the culture of ancient Rome beginning about 1000 BCE and ending with the so-called "Fall of Rome". It looks at some of the key people who played a role in Rome, from the time of the kings through the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire. It will also focus on the city of Rome itself, as well as Rome's expansion through Italy, the Mediterranean, and beyond.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
131
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jun 7
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jun 7
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Jul 10
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Jul 10
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25

CLAS 472A – Ancient Philosophy

A philosophical introduction to the major works of Plato.

Section
103
Days
Time
Date
Jul 7 - Aug 22
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 60
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 7 - Aug 22
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 60
Section
203
Days
Time
Date
Jul 7 - Aug 22
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 60
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 7 - Aug 22
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 60
GRK

GRK 112 – Intensive Beginning Classical Greek

Intensive study of basic morphology, grammar, and vocabulary of beginning classical Greek. Greek 112 provides an intensive introduction to Greek and is the equivalent of Greek 101 and 102. There are no prerequisites, though some background in Latin or Romance language may be helpful. As we will cover two semesters of material in fewer than five weeks, the pace is fast and the workload necessarily demanding. Students who successfully complete the course may advance to Greek 212 in Summer term or Greek 201 in the Fall term.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jun 9 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jun 9 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
LAT

LAT 101 – Elementary Latin I

An introduction to the basic morphology, syntax and vocabulary of Latin through reading and composition.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jul 3
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jul 3
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
May 19 - Jul 3
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: May 19 - Jul 3
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25

LAT 102 – Elementary Latin II

A second semester introduction to the basic morphology, syntax and vocabulary of Latin through reading and composition.

Section
101
Days
Time
Date
Jul 7 - Aug 22
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 7 - Aug 22
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25
Section
201
Days
Time
Date
Jul 7 - Aug 22
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days:
  • Time:
  • Dates: Jul 7 - Aug 22
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25

LAT 212 – Accelerated Latin II

Equivalent of LAT 201 and 202. Reading and composition, prose and poetry.

Section
001
Days
MoTuWeThFr
Time
09:00 AM - 12:45 PM
Date
Jul 14 - Aug 13
Instructor
Status
Open
Enrollment
0 / 25
  • Days: MoTuWeThFr
  • Time: 09:00 AM - 12:45 PM
  • Dates: Jul 14 - Aug 13
  • Status: Open
  • Enrollment: 0 / 25