HUMN-220E-01 (3534) Patriarchy in Greek and Roman Antiquity
Spring 2020, San Francisco Art Institute
Spring 2020, San Francisco Art Institute
Thursdays, 4.15-7pm, Chestnut Room 18 RONA REVISION: Migrating temporarily into cyberspace.
Course Blog: https://patriarchyingreekandromanantiquity.blogspot.com
Course Blog: https://patriarchyingreekandromanantiquity.blogspot.com
Instructor:
Dale Carrico, dcarrico@sfai.edu
Office Hours: Before class and by appointment.
Course Description:
The societies of Greek, Roman, and Christian antiquity were conspicuously patriarchal. Homeric heroes made history and conquered death with great words and deeds in an aspirational fantasy of masculine agency. The Roman paterfamilias, perhaps patriarchy's most quintessential expression, centered around the authoritarian male head of the household who held an unquestionable power of life and death over his children, female relatives, and household slaves. But in philosophy and in poetry, in Greek tragedies and in Roman comedies, we find glimpses of a considerably richer and more complicated world of gendered relations, erotic imagination, and human possibility, we encounter profound anxieties, ambivalences, and resistances to patriarchal practices and prejudices. This course will examine these tensions. We will be reading from Sappho, Homer, Gorgias, Plato, Aristophanes, Euripides, Cicero, Terence, Juvenal, Petronius, and many others.
Course Requirements: Attendance/Participation (15%), Reading Notebook (15%), Midterm Paper, 2-3pp. (15%), Presentation 2pp. (15%), Final Paper 5-6pp. (40%)
THESE REQUIREMENTS HAVE BEEN REVISED FOR THE RONA: The Reading Notebook is now a weekly writing assignment to be handed in each week, 3 quotes/3 questions minimum, due by end of the day of each class "meeting." From here on out this requirement will stand in for the attendance requirement and contribute to the participation requirement as well. (30% of the final grade); the Mid-term Response paper is now 25% of the final grade; the final 5-6pp. paper remains 40% of the final grade. The in-class presentation has become an extra credit assignment available to anybody who still wants to do it in an online form. Details of these changes soon forthcoming.
Attendance Policy: Attendance and punctuality are expected. Necessary absences should be discussed in advance whenever possible.
Provisional Schedule of Meetings
Week One | January 23 | Introductions
Week Two | January 30 | Poems of Sappho
Presentation: Portrait of a Girl {"Sappho"}; Portrait of Terentius Neo (two works) {Yucky}
Week Three | February 6 | Homer First and Last Chapters of the Iliad and an excerpt from Chapter IX posted on the blog.
Presentation: Apollo Belvedere {Bells}
Week Four | February 13 | Gorgias -- Encomium of Helen; Thucydides -- Melian Dialogue and Pericles' Funeral Oration
Presentation: From the House of Jason ("House of Fatal Love"), three works: Medea; Phaedra; Paris and Helen {Sarah B.}
Week Five | February 20 | Euripides -- Hecuba
Week Four | February 13 | Gorgias -- Encomium of Helen; Thucydides -- Melian Dialogue and Pericles' Funeral Oration
Presentation: From the House of Jason ("House of Fatal Love"), three works: Medea; Phaedra; Paris and Helen {Sarah B.}
Week Five | February 20 | Euripides -- Hecuba
Presentation: Athena Parthenos (Tennessee Reconstruction) {Jake VF}
Week Six | February 27 | Plato -- Symposium
Week Six | February 27 | Plato -- Symposium
Presentation: The Old Drunkard {or Drunken Old Woman} {Stone}
Week Seven | March 5 | Plato -- Apology and "Allegory of the Cave" from the Republic; Aristotle on Women
Week Seven | March 5 | Plato -- Apology and "Allegory of the Cave" from the Republic; Aristotle on Women
Presentation: Venus de Milo; Venus de' Medici (two works)
Week Eight | March 12 | Aristophanes -- Wasps
Week Eight | March 12 | Aristophanes -- Wasps
Presentation: Venus Kallipygos; Michelangelo Pistoletto: Golden Venus of Rags (1967-71) (two works) {Yuyang Ji}
Week Nine | Spring Break
Week Nine | Spring Break
Week Ten | March 23 | REVISED: "Study Week"
Week Eleven | April 2 | REVISED Terence -- Eunuchus -- Suetonius -- Caligula (From the House of the Vettii: Priapusand Trajan's Column)
Week Twelve | April 9 | REVISED Hortensia in the Forum (posted to the blog), Marcus Cicero -- Commentariolum Petitionis (Aphrodite, Pan, and Eros)
Week Thirteen | April 16 | REVISED Juvenal -- Satires I, II, and III (Sleeping Hermaphroditus [sic])
Week Fourteen | April 23 | REVISED Petronius -- Trimalchio's Feast from Satyricon (The link takes you to Chapter Six -- keep reading through Chapter Ten.) (The "Dionysiac Frieze" from the Villa of the Mysteries)
Week Fifteen | April 30 | Workshop for the Final Paper
Week Sixteen | May 7 | Concluding Remarks on Rape Culture, Augustine from City of God | Final Papers Due
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