About CLAS 2990 A

See Schedule of Courses for specific titles.

Notes

PACE students with permission and override; Cross-listed with POLS 2990 A, total cross-list cap = 60; Special Topics courses cannot carry CC designations

Section Description

Democracy was once invented in Ancient Greece, as was the rule of law, and political theory, but the theorists mostly did not like democracy. This is a survey of major works and concepts concerning politics and governance in the ancient Greek and Roman world, including Plato, Aristotle, Thucydides, tragedies, Homer, Cicero, and Seneca. Topics covered will include the rule of law, ideal states, justice, ancient democracy, and the Roman Republic and Empire. The span of time will be about 1500 years, from 'Homer' to Marcus Aurelius.

Section Expectation

The most important task in this course is reading primary sources: think of it as listening to Greek and Roman voices. There will also be some reading of secondary sources.

Evaluation

Presentations, summaries of secondary literature, midterm and final with both factual and conceptual content (right-or-wrong answer questions, short identifications, essay questions, explanation of primary source passages).

Important Dates

Last Day to Add
Last Day to Drop
Last Day to Withdraw with 50% Refund
Last Day to Withdraw with 25% Refund
Last Day to Withdraw

Resources

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CLAS 2990 A is closed to new enrollment.

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