CLST 271: Classical Mythology
Fall Semester 2002
Dr. Jacqueline Long
Extra credit assignment
relating to Verse Theater Manhattan's performance of
War Music
8:00 PM, Thursday 26 September, Sky Auditorium
Goals
- To attend and enjoy the performance of a modern adaptation of an
important ancient Greek literary work retelling a mythological story
- To explore how the performance brings out the resonances of the
ancient myth and literary work
- To write a brief report on your findings, explaining them clearly
This assignment is totally optional for all
students.
Dates, if you undertake this assignment
- Thursday, 9/26, 8:00 PM: attend Verse Theater Manhattan's
performance of
War Music in Sky Auditorium
You are also very welcome to attend and enjoy the performance,
but not submit the written report! Participation credit to all
attendees
- Thursday, 10/3, 10:00 AM: submit your 2-3 page typed report
at the start of our class meeting
Positive-only Paper credit to Report writers
Assessment and Criteria for the different levels of extra credit
- A small bonus in your Participation component will be granted to
all attendees. You will need to speak with
me at the performance and personally confirm that you are there: I
will try to position myself reasonably prominently near the main
entrance to the auditorium during the 10 or so minutes before and
after the performance, with a list.
- Report writers will have your
report-grades averaged in (at the proration of 25% of a regular paper)
to your Paper components if and only if the report-grade improves your
Paper average. Reports will be assessed on
quality of
content (insight, evidence, and argumentation), and
correctness of
format (grammar, vocabulary, spelling, typing); flawless format will
not redeem flawed content, but too many flaws in format will make
excellently insightful evidence and argumentation look less good than
it deserves. Reports should address the following points:
- Identify what section or aspect of the performance you're
going to explore (event, character, theme), and what it corresponds to
in Homer's Iliad (identify by translator and publication
information what version of the Iliad you're referring to) -
this point should be covered very briefly, just enough to orient the
report.
- Explain concisely what the performance did with the item you're
focusing on: how did the performance make it strike you as interesting
and important? What significance does it have for understanding
classical mythology, and how do you know? Support your interpretation
with relevant evidence and clear arguments.
- Compare and contrast the performance's handling of your item with
the way the corresponding item is handled in Homer's Iliad, the
original on which the performance is based. What significance does your
item bear in Homer? What has the performance made different from
Homer? Does it change the significance of the item in any way? Explain
and show how, supporting your interpretations with relevant evidence
and clear arguments.
BACK to CLST 271 Schedule
Revised 18 September 2002 by
jlong1@orion.it.luc.edu
http://www.luc.edu/depts/classics/