LAT 401

Fall 2019 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 2 OR 3 hours.

Intermediate level readings in classical Latin literature.

3 undergraduate hours. 2 graduate hours. May be repeated for a total of 6 undergraduate hours or 4 graduate hours in separate semesters, if topics vary. Prerequisite: LAT 202 (formerly LAT 104) or four years of high school Latin.

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LAT 401 class schedule data for fall 2019
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
67951
Lecture-Discussion
G
9:30AM -10:50AM
TR
207 Gregory Hall
Walters, B
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/26/19-12/11/19
Credit:
2 hours
Section Title:
Roman Corruption
Section Info:
"A Historiography of Roman Corruption" In this course we will read selections from the works of some of Rome’s greatest surviving historians, including the Elder Cato, Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus. Attention will be paid to the motives, contexts, and styles of individual authors. Writing in diverse periods, sometimes separated by hundreds of years, each of these historians presents the history of Rome as increasingly marred by degeneration and decline. Rome’s glorious past (whenever it is) is almost always better than the failures of a more recent age. To lend thematic cohesion to an otherwise vast body of material, particular emphasis will thus be placed on the themes of moral and political corruption in the historians studied. Such a focus will enable us to track one of the major ways in which these writers engaged with the works of their predecessors in order to fashion a unified tradition of moralizing history.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign.
67950
Lecture-Discussion
UG
9:30AM -10:50AM
TR
207 Gregory Hall
Walters, B
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/26/19-12/11/19
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Roman Corruption
Section Info:
"A Historiography of Roman Corruption" In this course we will read selections from the works of some of Rome’s greatest surviving historians, including the Elder Cato, Sallust, Livy, and Tacitus. Attention will be paid to the motives, contexts, and styles of individual authors. Writing in diverse periods, sometimes separated by hundreds of years, each of these historians presents the history of Rome as increasingly marred by degeneration and decline. Rome’s glorious past (whenever it is) is almost always better than the failures of a more recent age. To lend thematic cohesion to an otherwise vast body of material, particular emphasis will thus be placed on the themes of moral and political corruption in the historians studied. Such a focus will enable us to track one of the major ways in which these writers engaged with the works of their predecessors in order to fashion a unified tradition of moralizing history.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
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