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Note: You must establish a session for Winter Term 2001 on wolverineaccess.umich.edu in order to use the link "Check Times, Location, and Availability". Once your session is established, the links will function.
Courses in Greek
This page was created at 7:15 PM on Mon, Jan 29, 2001.
Open courses in Greek
(*Not real-time Information. Review the "Data current as of: " statement at the bottom of hyperlinked page)
Wolverine Access Subject listing for GREEK
Winter Term '01 Time Schedule for Greek.
GREEK 102. Elementary Greek.
Elementary Courses
Section 001 – Meets with Greek 503.001
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 101. No credit granted to those who have completed or are enrolled in 103, 310, or 503. Graduate students should elect the course as Greek 503. (4). (LR).
Credits: (4).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
Greek 102 is the second term of the elementary Ancient Greek sequence and requires that the student has already completed Greek 101. In Greek 102, students will supplement their study of syntax and grammar by reading Attic prose selections. There will be a series of quizzes and hour exams in addition to a final exam.
GREEK 102. Elementary Greek.
Elementary Courses
Section 002 – Meets with Greek 503.002.
Instructor(s): Arthur Verhoogt
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 101. No credit granted to those who have completed or are enrolled in 103, 310, or 503. Graduate students should elect the course as Greek 503. (4). (LR).
Credits: (4).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
Greek 102 is the second term of the elementary Ancient Greek sequence and requires that the student has already completed Greek 101. In Greek 102, students will supplement their study of syntax and grammar by reading Attic prose selections. There will be a series of quizzes and hour exams in addition to a final exam.
GREEK 302. Second-Year Greek.
Elementary Courses
Section 001 – Meets with Greek 508.001.
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 102. The language requirement is satisfied with the successful completion of both Greek 301 and 302. (4). (LR).
Credits: (4).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
This course is the second half of the second-year ancient Greek language sequence. The primary goal of the student in Greek 302 is to learn how to read Homer; hence emphasis is placed on Homeric vocabulary and grammar. The class will translate and discuss passages from the Odyssey. There will be quizzes, a midterm, and a final exam.
GREEK 308/ACABS 308. The Acts of the Apostles.
Elementary Courses
Section 001.
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 101 and 102; and permission of instructor. (3). (Excl).
Credits: (3).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
No Description Provided
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GREEK 402. Greek Drama.
Intermediate Courses
Section 001 – Topic
Instructor(s): Benjamin B Acosta-Hughes (bacosta@umich.edu)
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 302. (3). (HU). May be repeated for a total of nine credits.
Credits: (3).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
This third-year Greek course will read two tragedies, Euripides' Hippolytus and Sophocles' Trachiniae. All Students will be expected to read aloud (scan) and to translate at each meeting: there will also be ample opportunity for discussion of the texts and related issues. There will be a midterm, final, and a short paper.
GREEK 410. Elementary Greek Prose.
Advanced Courses
Section 001.
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 302. (3). (Excl).
Credits: (3).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
Introduction to the writing of Greek prose. Designed to cover the fundamentals of prose composition i.e. all constructions and idioms (chiefly of the Attic dialect) that are frequently required in Greek composition. Begins systematically with detached sentences (illustrating various constructions and the most notable differences between English and Greek idiom) to be rendered into Greek, to give practice in writing Greek correctly, and concludes with connected pieces or continuous narratives selected from original English passages for turning into Greek prose. Some familiarity with the basic elements of Greek syntax is assumed. Open to both undergraduates and graduate students.
GREEK 457. Greek Orators.
Advanced Courses
Section 001 – Women and the Public.
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 302. (3). (Excl).
Credits: (3).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
Focusing on works of orators of the fifth and fourth centuries (Lysias, Demosthenes, etc.) this course will explore the role of women in classical Athens in the public and, primarily in the private domain. Texts describing women in relation to the polis, in civic religion, in domestic activities, as well as women's activities outside the household will be the focal point. The aim of the course is to read these texts carefully and in an expedient way by paying attention to their social context and their literary attributes. The class will be conducted as a seminar and students are expected to contribute to the discussions daily. Requirements: one in-class presentation, two short papers, a midterm, and a final exam.
GREEK 499. Supervised Reading.
Advanced Courses
Prerequisites & Distribution: Permission of instructor. (1-4). (Excl). May not be included in a concentration plan in Greek Language and Literature or Classical Languages and Literatures. (INDEPENDENT). May be repeated for credit.
Credits: (1-4).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
Regular reports and conferences required.
GREEK 554. Plato: Meno and other Early Dialogues.
Advanced Courses
Section 001.
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 302. (3). (Excl).
Credits: (3).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
In this course we will read some of Plato's early, aporetic dialogues: the Charmides, Lysis, and parts of the Gorgias. We will also read some of the fragments of the Socratics. Emphasis will be on the figure of Socrates and the place of the elenchus in Platonic ethics. We will use the new Oxford Classical text as well as as a number of secondary works. The purpose of the course is to familiarize students with the philosophy of Socrates, both from within the Platonic corpus, and from the perspective of later, Hellenistic Philosophers.
GREEK 592. History of Greek Literature, Euripides to the Romances.
Advanced Courses
Section 001.
Instructor(s): Benjamin B Acosta-Hughes (bacosta@umich.edu)
Prerequisites & Distribution: Greek 591. (3). (Excl).
Credits: (3; 2 in the half-term).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
A survey of the development of Greek literature from the late 5th century to the period of the Second Sophistic, including tragedy, oratory, various genres of Hellenistic poetry, the novel and a selection of Greek literature from the imperial period. Lectures and assigned readings.
GREEK 599. Supervised Reading in Greek.
Advanced Courses
Prerequisites & Distribution: Permission of instructor. (1-4). (Excl). (INDEPENDENT). May be repeated for credit.
Credits: (1-4).
Course Homepage: No Homepage Submitted.
Regular reports and conferences required.

This page was created at 7:15 PM on Mon, Jan 29, 2001.

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