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MinotStateUniversityCollege of Arts and Sciences, Division of Humanities

Humanities 251: Classical to Early Medieval Western Civilization

2:00-3:15 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 330 West Hartnett Hall

Dyplon Crater, Winged VictoryPericles of Athens

Course website:

Course Info

Instructor: Robert E. Kibler

Office: 229 West Hartnett Hall

Office Hours: 12-1:00, T/Th, 12-1:00 MW

Telephone:

Work: 858 3876

Cell: 720 2716

E-mail:

Required Texts (on course instructor website or in Bookstore)

L. Cunningham, Culture and Values (optional, but many lectures are grounded in this text)

Tom Holland, Persian fire

Homer’s Illiad

Thucydides’ Peloponnesian Wars (Book 5 on website)
Plato. Republic
Sophocles, Antigone

Virgil, Aeneid
Caesar, Gallic Wars (first book on website)

Tacitus, Germania
Heaney, Beowulf
Griffith, The Battle of Maldon

Course Overview

Humanities 251 helps fulfill MinotStateUniversity’s General Education requirement, and is the first in a three-course sequence designed to introduce us you to the tremendous intellectual, artistic, and cultural heritage left by those who have already had their day in the sun. As such, its primary goal is to afford you the opportunity to critically evaluate past thought and culture both for itself and as it relates to life and culture now, here in Minot, in the year 2011.

During the Spring 2014term we will explore enduring aspects of Western civilization as we find them beginning about the 8th century BCE in the land of the Persians and Greeks—Of the Persian Emperors Cyrus and Xerxes, of the Greek thinkers and poets, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Sophocles, Homer, Sappho, and others-- then moving westward through space and onwards through time, we pass through the ancient Roman world of Caesar, Catullus, and Tacitus-- from thence into early medieval Europe, the land and time of Beowulf and other warring people. We end in the European world of early medieval Celtic, Germanic,and Scandinavian tribes, wrestling not only with each other after the fall of Western Rome, but also with a new style of belief--Christianity. I will introduce what is currently known about these Western people and their worlds, and more importantly, together we will read what they actually say themselves, through their art, music, diaries, diatribes, philosophies, and poems. In such a way, by term’s end, we will have acquired the intellectual resources necessary to evaluate the merit of many aspects of the ongoing human story in terms of the classical Western past, and to know a little bit more about the world we today call our own as a result.

When you complete this course, you should be able to:

  1. Analyze art and culture of the period in historical, formal, and personal ways.
  2. Identify or define the things necessary to understand the art and culture of the period.
  3. Trace the general influences and lines of development of the art and culture of this period.
  4. Understand how cultures—including non-Western ones—express values and perceptions in artistic and philosophic forms appropriate to our own contemporary cultures.
  5. Understand what constitutes sublimity or beauty in the arts and culture of the period.

Humanities 251 is constituted as a mix of lecture and class discussion, so come prepared to contribute to the great adventure in learning! We learn in an “enquiry-based” classroom, searching for both questions and answers through dialogue, live, on the spot. So always come ready to add your voice to the commotion.

Attendance:

You have to be in class. When you miss a class, you probably miss a quiz or a test and you will definitely miss information for which you will be responsible later. I also lower your course grade by one letter for every ‘fourth’ absence. Expect short reading quizzes almost daily—especially at first.

Course Specifics

Our work is divided into three geo-historic periods—Classical Persia/Greece, Classical Rome, Medieval Europe, and is of two types—informational and analytical. That is to say, expect to simply have to know/memorize some dates, facts, bits of information about the periods and their prevalent art, literature, and philosophy. Also expect to read both secondary and primary sources related to these three periods, and to draw thoughtful conclusions from what you read, supported by specific proofs from the texts.

Formal evaluation of our term’s work will come in three forms: quizzes, exams, and short response papers. We will have many of these—quizzes will happen almost daily and will constitute 25% of the grade for a given period. Response papers constitute 25% of the grade for a given period. Exams constitute 50% of the weight for a given period.The cumulative quizzes, exams, and papers for any given geo-historic period will result in one 25% grade for that period, even though the number of quizzes, exams, and papers will probably vary from period to period, depending on the level and quality of classroom discussion. As a result, we will have four (4) big grades for the term, and roughly the following amount of work per section:

Persia/Greece25% (5-10 quizzes, 1test, 2-3 two-page typed papers)

Rome25% (same)

N. Europe25% (same)

Europe and Cumulative final 25% plus 25% Medieval Europe if time is a problem(comprehensive, 2-3 short essays, 20-30 identifications of dates, distances, directions, persons, events, ideas, artworks, based on allthat we have done during the term.Note that exam for Medieval Europe is folded into the comprehensive final exam, so expect a significant number of questions for this period on the exam.

There will be no make up quizzes or exams, and no late papers accepted without a good reason given.

Syllabus

***keep in mind that this syllabus is a rough map of where we hope to go this term and when. As a rough map, it is subject to change, and we will likely change it as the need arises. Bring this syllabus with you to class so that you can record the changes as they are likely to happen.

Link Back to Kibler Homepage

Ancient Greece

Week 1 14-16 Jan

Introductions, dates, The Spartans, the Athenians (movies)

Begin Holland’s Persian Fire

Week 2 21-23 Jan

Holland’s Persian Fire

Discussion from Cunningham Chapters 2 and 3

Week 3 28-30 Jan

Persian Fire

Greek Statuary, theater, philosophy

The Pre-Socratics, Socratic and Aristotelian analytic methods.

Read Thucydides’ “Melian Dialogue” (website)

Week 4 4-6 Feb

Homer’s Illiad

Week 511-13 Feb

Homer’s Illiad

Week 618-20 Feb

Sophocles’Antigone and Plato’s Republic

Week 7 25-27 Feb

Plato’s Republic

ExamI on Classical Greece

Rome

Week 8 4-6 March

Discussion from Cunningham Chapter 4, pages 89-119.

Introduction to Rome: Movie

Dates, places, terms, gods and goddesses for Roman World

Week 9 11-13 March

Virgil’s Aeneid

15-23 March Spring Break: Read in the Aeneid during break

Week 10 25-27 March
Virgil’s Aeneid

Week 11 1-3 April
Caesar’s Gallic Wars

Tacitus’ Germania

Week 12 8-10 April

EXAM II: Persians Greeks Romans
Introduction Early Medieval Europe: Dates, Parable of the Sparrow, terms
Discussion from Cunningham Chapter 9
read Beowulf

Early Medieval Europe

Week 13 15-17 April

Beowulf

Week 14 22-24 April

“Beowulf”
“Battle of Maldon”

Week 15 29 April-1 May

Beowulf, Battle of Maldon, Dream of the Rood, The Wife’s Lament

Week 16 6-8 May
Review, Finals Prep

Final Exam week

Final Exam to be held at _____, on May ______, in 330 Hartnett Hall West.

Link Back to Kibler Homepage