|
LATN 286/289: The Age of Nero
Fall Semester 2007
|
|
Nero's reign attained both new heights of aestheticism and new depths of sordidness
in Rome's public culture - appalled contemporaries might have said, often both at
once. We will examine Nero's impact through selections from two texts, Suetonius's
biography of Nero and Lucan's epic of the civil wars that, in a sense to which Lucan
called attention, produced Nero as their consequence.
Our work this term will have two central aims (plus the third, of having fun
with them):
- To develop facility at reading Latin (acquiring and solidifying knowledge
of syntax, vocabulary, and verse form, and honing skills for integrating them)
- To make inquiry into Roman history and culture at the end of the Julio-Claudian
period
Class Meetings:
TTh 8:30-9:45 AM
Crown Center 572
|
Dr. Long is available in Office Hours:
MWF 11:30am-12:00noon, 2nd floor Piper Hall
TTh 9:45-10:15am, Crown Center 553
or by appointment
773-508-3654
jlong1@luc.edu |
Texts
- Required: Suetonius, Nero, ed. B. Warmington
(Bristol Classical
Press 1977)
- Required: Lucan, De Bello Civili Book II, ed. E. Fantham
(Cambridge University Press 1992)
- Recommended: J. H. Allen et al., Allen & Greenough's New Latin Grammar
(Dover Books 2006); e-text available through
Perseus
Schedule of Assignments
- Latin reading assignments will be determined by the class's progress;
additional exercises polishing points of syntax and vocabulary will be assigned as
needed. We will aim to build strong reading skills, historical understanding, and
literary-critical acuteness. Short quizzes check in on nuts and bolts of the Latin.
Prepared "literary translation" and "researched commentary" give scope to develop
ideas about what our Latin texts are saying, how they say it, and why it matters;
they are due in hand, at the start of the class period, on the days
for which they are assigned.
- Dates to watch out for:
Tu 8/28 |
First day of class: Introduction to Nero and Suetonius. |
M 9/3 |
Labor Day: No classes (not that we would have been meeting class in any event).
|
Tu 9/11 - correction! |
Short quiz as well as ongoing classwork. |
Tu 9/18 |
Short but wonderfully creative literary translation due. |
Tu 9/25 |
Short quiz as well as ongoing classwork. |
Tu 10/2 |
Short but intriguing researched commentary
due. |
M 10/8-Tu 10/9 |
Mid-semester Break: No classes.
|
Th 10/11 |
Mid-term examination. |
Tu 10/16 |
Introduction to Lucan. |
Th 10/25 |
Short quiz as well as ongoing classwork. |
Th 11/8 |
Short quiz as well as ongoing classwork. |
Th 11/15 |
Short but wonderfully creative literary translation
due. |
W 11/21 - F 11/23 |
Thanksgiving Break: No classes.
|
Th 11/19 |
Short quiz as well as ongoing classwork. |
Th 12/6 |
Short but intriguing researched commentary
due. |
M 12/10 |
Undergraduate Study Day
|
Sa 12/15
9:00am-11:00am |
Final examination.
|
Grades will be based on:
Participation (beyond attendance: includes oral translation and contributions
to class discussion)
- Penalty for excessive
absences (see below)
|
15%
-2.5% per absence falling
within the definition of excess (see below) |
Short quizzes (scheduled) |
cumulative average = 15% |
Written homework (assigned in class) |
cumulative average = 10% |
Literary translations and researched commentaries (@ 7.5% each) |
30% |
Mid-term exam |
15% |
Final exam |
15% |
|
|
The "midterm grade" will reflect the weighted average, pro-rated,
of the components completed to date: participation, homework and quizzes
to date and literary translation, researched commentary and midterm exam.
Attendance and other policies
- We are a cooperative endeavor. Your insights, your questions, and your thoughtful
help in working out answers together all contribute to your own and to your colleagues'
learning, including mine. We all need your active, courteous, wise participation, every
meeting. Language skills, particularly, grow by practice: if you miss work, you lose
momentum, and lost momentum blocks your growth.
Attendance and preparation are a matter of respect. Far more importantly, they are a matter
of self-respect.
- Concessions: Prepared is better than unprepared,
and prompt is better than late,
but even unprepared attendance or late arrival is better than
missing out completely - just don't disrupt your fellow students.
- Since unregulated self-interest, as set forth above, doesn't always
motivate quite enough, and since being absent makes it impossible for you
to contribute to everyone's learning and the loss to us all is real,
a small penalty in the participation grade has been
instituted for excessive absences. Absences shall
be defined as excessive, as follows:
- Each unexcused absence beyone a total of three absences,
excused or unexcused. That is, even excused absences kill your budget
of unexcused absences.
- Although it is better to attend even part of
a class than to miss it entirely (provided, of course, you
avoid disrupting the work of your colleagues), repeated chronic
lateness (more than 10 minutes) shall be counted
as partial absences.
- Absences will be totalled over the whole semester.
- If despite all this motivation, absolute, non-negotiable necessity
nevertheless intemperately demands that you must miss class,
please let me know as far in advance as possible.
Legitimate absences (serious illness, court appearances)
should be documented in writing (n.b.: appointments with Loyola
faculty and administrators should be scheduled at times
that do not conflict with courses for which you are registered).
- Quizzes and exams can be rescheduled only for truly dire
and documented reasons. Bring clean, lined paper and pens that don't smear.
- Written homework (literary translations, researched commentaries, and any other
exercises that get to looking like they will give you helpful practice)
is due at the beginning of class; it cannot be accepted late.
- Legibility always helps. Please type or word-process literary translations and
researched commentaries - double-spacing is especially good for translations - and
hand-write as clearly as you can manage when you need to use hand-writing. I hereby issue
the first blanket apology of the semester for my own handwriting, and my eternally
standing offer of aid in decipherment.
- "Correct" grammar and spelling tell the rest of the world you have mastered rules that
define important parts of higher education's game. They also give you access to a system by
which you can communicate your ideas clearly - which is really the point..
- Thanks!
Internet resources
Specially for this course
Resources for Latin
- Allen
& Greenough (also a recommended text, in print) is a good reference grammar on-line.
Consult its sections on forms and syntax as
often as the mood strikes you - they're always worth knowing. Scroll down
the Table of Contents to which this link takes you, and click on the link for each
item you wish to consult. Part of the Perseus Project.
- Lewis & Short On-Line
offers look-up access to a detailed reference dictionary.
Type in the character string for which you wish to search (preferably,
the dictionary-entry form of the word you want) and "submit query".
Warning! This page was initially set up
for people working with Greek, so many of its directions and responses
will come to you in terms of Greek words and transliterations. Do not
be alarmed! Your instructor will endeavor to help unsnarl any
confusions: just ask. Another helpful part of the
Perseus Project.
- Early Roman Calendar,
an overview presented by Calendars
through the Ages.
- Nuntii Latini offers current news briefs
in Latin. Produced by FYI, the Finnish Broadcasting Company, edited by Professor Emeritus Tuomo
Pekkanen and Docent Reijo Pitkäranta of Helsinki University.
- latin.wunderground.com offers weather reports
in Latin. Produced by The Weather Underground, Inc..
Additional University resources
- Loyola's Learning Assistance Services, on the Web
and in the Sullivan Center for Student Services on the Lakeshore Campus, offers workshops on topics such as study
skills and test taking.
They will also help arrange accommodations for students with disabilities.
- The Tutoring Center
(physically in the Sullivan Center; peer-counselors) and the
Writing Centers (sponsored
by the Department of English: graduate students with expertise in writing pedagogy;
Sullivan Center 245 and on the Water Tower Campus in 25 East Pearson 605) both offer
consultation services.
Academic honesty
Any practice of academic dishonesty (cheating, plagiarism,
obstructing the work of other students, etc.) perpetrated in this
course will result in failure of the course.
Do not do it.
For basic principles and definitions, see the subsection on "Academic Integrity" in the
General
Academic Standards and Regulations.
Many websites offer fuller information and strategies by which you can keep yourself clear
from plagiarism: for example, from
Oregon State University,
from Indiana University,
and from Purdue University.
Learning is wholly personal: it only happens if you do it yourself.
Your University record should be certifying only what has really happened.
Loyola University requires that all instances of academic dishonesty must be reported to the
chairperson of the department involved and to the academic Dean of the student's College.
Revised 28 September 2007 by
jlong1@luc.edu
http://www.luc.edu/depts/classics/