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4
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50832
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Lecture-Discussion
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G
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9:00AM
-9:50AM
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MWF
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215 Davenport Hall
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Garcia-Molina, E
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- Availability:
- CrossListOpen (Restricted)
- Part of Term:
- 1
- Date Range:
- 08/24/26-12/09/26
- Special Approval:
- Instructor Approval Required
- Credit:
- 4 hours
- Section Info:
- Sallust - “Plain and abrupt, hostile to eloquence, ostensibly archaic but in truth artful, insidious, innovatory.” This is how the Roman historian Ronald Syme described the style of Sallust, considered even in antiquity to be one of the greatest historians Rome produced. In this class, we will be reading his Bellum Catilinae, an account of the machinations of the Roman statesman Lucius Sergius Catilina, to explore Sallust’s unique historiographical style. Through close readings of the Latin text, students will gain a deeper mastery of non-standard syntax and archaic vocabulary, while discussing the blurred lines between biography, rhetoric, political thought, and history exemplified in the conflicted figure of Cataline and the overarching setting of a Republican Rome in moral decay and civil strife.
- Restriction(s):
-
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign.
|
|
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4
|
|
30786
|
Lecture-Discussion
|
U
|
9:00AM
-9:50AM
|
MWF
|
215 Davenport Hall
|
Garcia-Molina, E
|
- Availability:
- CrossListOpen (Restricted)
- Part of Term:
- 1
- Date Range:
- 08/24/26-12/09/26
- Special Approval:
- Instructor Approval Required
- Credit:
- 3 hours
- Section Info:
- Sallust - “Plain and abrupt, hostile to eloquence, ostensibly archaic but in truth artful, insidious, innovatory.” This is how the Roman historian Ronald Syme described the style of Sallust, considered even in antiquity to be one of the greatest historians Rome produced. In this class, we will be reading his Bellum Catilinae, an account of the machinations of the Roman statesman Lucius Sergius Catilina, to explore Sallust’s unique historiographical style. Through close readings of the Latin text, students will gain a deeper mastery of non-standard syntax and archaic vocabulary, while discussing the blurred lines between biography, rhetoric, political thought, and history exemplified in the conflicted figure of Cataline and the overarching setting of a Republican Rome in moral decay and civil strife.
- Restriction(s):
-
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
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