Ancient Sexualities
CCIV 350
Fall 2006 not offered
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Crosslisting:
FGSS 268 |
Along with the invention of "homosexuality" as both word and concept came an historical evaluation of expressions of sexuality in various civilizations, including ancient Greece and Rome. Beginning with the late Victorian classicists J.A. Symonds and the circle of Oscar Wilde (trained at Oxford in Classics, or, as it was called at the time, "Greats"), this scholarly enterprise has enjoyed a renewed flourishing in the last thirty years. Many Second-Wave Feminist scholars have studied the roles of women in both ancient civilizations, including the possibilities for expressions of female desire and women's sexualities; many Classicists have studied the expressions of both male and female sexual experience in antiquity; meanwhile, other scholars have theorized the sex/gender systems of various cultures. In this course we shall read amongst these (all too often disparate) bodies of scholarship, attempting both to understand the varieties of sexual experience in ancient Greece and Rome and also to understand the current state of these scholarly enterprises.
OBJECTIVES: Designed for both Classical Studies majors and non-majors, this course takes as its over-arching objective the study of the history and theories of sexuality, as they apply to Classical Antiquity. For majors, the primary texts read may be familiar, but the analysis new; for non-majors, the tools of analysis may be familiar, but the cultural specifics and primary texts analyzed may be new. This course is designed, then, to broaden the intellectual horizons of all students, be they Classical Studies majors or not. |
Essential Capabilities:
None |
Credit: 1 |
Gen Ed Area Dept:
HA CLAS |
Course Format: Seminar | Grading Mode: Student Option |
Level: UGRD |
Prerequisites: None |
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Fulfills a Major Requirement for: None |
Major Readings:
K. J. Dover, GREEK HOMOSEXUALITY D. Halperin, J. J. Winkler, & F. I. Zeitlin, edd., BEFORE SEXUALITY J. P. Hallett & M. B. Skinner, edd., ROMAN SEXUALITIES Plus Course Reader (Greek and Latin texts in original and in translation; a selection of articles and selections from books by key authorisin the field).
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Examinations and Assignments: Weekly one-page response papers; two short essays; final paper. |
Additional Requirements and/or Comments: Students are urged to attend every class starting from the first. |
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