CLASSICS 2200. Greek and Roman Mythology



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CLASSICS 2200 Greek and Roman Mythology 2015-16 Instructor: Aara Suksi Makron Vase. Boston 13.186. Potter: Hieron. Painter: Makron. Attic (= Athenian) red-figure, ca. 490-480 BCE. Detail, Side A: showing, from left to right, Paris, Eros, Helen, Aphrodite. Course Description Myths are culturally significant narratives that change as they are repeated across space and through time. This course offers a survey of the major Greek and Roman myths known from art and texts ranging from Homer s Iliad through Ovid s Metamorphoses. We will consider the myths in relation to their cultural contexts at different historical moments in the Greek and Roman worlds. We will see how they reflect and reinforce, but also problematize, the values, fears and desires of the Greeks and Romans. We will seek to understand the compelling psychological and cultural power of mythic narratives. 1

Your Instructor Prof. Aara Suksi e-mail: asuksi@uwo.ca Dept. of Classical Studies (Lawson 3205) My office: Lawson 3225 Office Hours: TBA Phone 661 2111 ex 81555 I am an Associate Professor in the Department of Classics, and served as Chair of the Department from 2008-2013. I came to Western in 2001, having completed my PhD in Classics at the University of Toronto. I have also worked at the University of Alberta. In addition to Greek and Roman Mythology, I teach courses in Greek language and literature at all levels. My research is in the field of Greek literature, especially Greek Drama and the Ancient Greek Novel. Professor Aara Suksi Teaching Assistants Morgan Kostiew e-mail mkostiew@uwo.ca Contact Morgan by e-mail if your last name begins with A-K Richard Parker e-mail rparke@uwo.ca Contact Richard by e-mail if your last name begins L-Z Feel free to attend office hours for any of the three of us. Please check OWL announcements for office hours. Time and Place Tuesdays 7-9 pm. Natural Sciences 145. Lectures will begin promptly at 7 pm and will continue to 8:50 pm, with no break. 2

Objectives You will become familiar with the major myth cycles from ancient Greece and Rome. You will know what types of evidence we have available for the myths, and the limitations of that evidence. You will gain an understanding of how the myths functioned in their cultural contexts. You will learn to compare different mythical narratives and to identify common story-patterns. You will gain some awareness of how the myths of ancient Greece and Rome have survived in different forms throughout the history of Western culture to the present day. Learning Outcomes Successful students will have developed skills in closely reading and interpreting literary texts and art images. They will be able to recognize the ways that narratives reflect their cultural contexts. They will be able to identify and to compare story patterns that arise in different contexts. They will be able to identify the major characters of Greek and Roman myths as they appear in art. They will have some ability to apply this knowledge to the interpretation of later cultural artifacts from the Western tradition that refer to Greek and Roman myths. Text Stephen L. Harris and Gloria Platzner. Classical Mythology: Images and Insights. 6 th edition. McGraw-Hill 2011. This text has been ordered at the UWO Bookstore. One copy is available on 2-hour reserve at the Weldon library. There will be additional assigned readings that are available online. Details are provided in the course schedule, below. Evaluation 30% term test 1 Hour. Nov. 17 Multiple choice 30% term test 1 Hour. Feb. 9 Multiple choice 40% Final Exam 2 Hours Cumulative; Multiple choice You can best prepare for the above by completing the scheduled readings before class and by attending lectures regularly. Lecture material will supplement assigned readings, rather than repeat them. If you find you are having trouble with any of the course material, it is best to see your TA during office hours sooner in the course rather than later, so that you can get help before you feel overwhelmed. If you are not comfortable with multiple choice evaluation, then please consider carefully whether you want to take this course. The Learning Skills Services office at the Student Development Centre (http://www.sdc.uwo.ca/) offers workshops on studying from a text-book and on writing multiple-choice exams, as well as individual counseling about study skills. Important: Absence from a test or exam will result in a grade of zero. If extreme and unforeseeable circumstances prevent you from writing any of the above, you must let me know as soon as possible and also contact your Faculty Academic Counselor to request accommodation (see information box below). Please do not wait until you get an appointment with your Faculty Counselor to let me know that you will be seeking accommodation. Do not ask to do an extra assignment to improve your grade. In the interests of fairness to all students, I do not grant such requests. 3

Website and Communication This course has an OWL site. We will use the site to post announcements, PowerPoint slides from lectures, links to readings not included in the textbook, grades, and links of interest. To communicate with us please use our email addresses, rather than the mail function in OWL, and please use your own uwo email address in any correspondence. This will prevent your message from getting blocked by spam filters. Classroom Courtesy It is important that all students have access to the lecture material with the least distraction possible. For this reason I ask you to be aware of the following expectations: Please refrain from carrying on conversations during the lecture. If you have a question about the lecture, please do raise your hand and we will be happy to address it. Do your best to arrive on time; the lecture will begin promptly at 7 pm. Please also remain until the lecture is finished. If you absolutely must arrive late or leave early, try to sit where it will cause the least distraction and inconvenience to your fellow students. Cell-phones should be turned off during lecture. Please be mindful that content on your laptop screen can be distracting to students sitting around you, and restrict your activity on your computer to note-taking related to the lecture. NOTE FROM THE DEAN OF ARTS and HUMANITIES: You are responsible for ensuring that you have successfully completed all course prerequisites and that you have not taken an antirequisite course. Lack of prerequisites may not be used as basis of appeal. If you are not eligible for a course, you may be removed from it at any time, and you will receive no adjustment to your fees. These decisions cannot be appealed. There are no prerequisites for this course, but it is not open to first-year students. The anitrequisite is the old Classics 137. PLAGIARISM and other Academic Offences: Students must write their essays and assignments in their own words. Whenever students take an idea, or a passage of text from another author, they must acknowledge their debt both by using quotation marks where appropriate and by proper referencing such as footnotes or citations. Plagiarism is a major academic offence (see Scholastic Offence Policy in the Western Academic Calendar). There are no written assignments for this course, but any type of academic offence committed during tests or the exam will be taken very seriously. No aids of any kind are allowed in the tests and exam, and no communication between students will be permitted during the tests and exam. Copying answers from a neighbour s test or exam is a serious academic offence for which there are grave consequences. Removing a test or exam from the room is an academic offence. POLICY ON ACCOMMODATION FOR MEDICAL ILLNESS: http://www.uwo.ca/univsec/pdf/academic_policies/appeals/accommodation_medical 15JUN.pdf [downloadable Student Medical Certificate (SMC): http://www.uwo.ca/univsec/pdf/academic_policies/appeals/medicalform.pdf Students seeking academic accommodation on medical grounds for any missed tests, exams and/or assignments worth 10% or more of their final grade must apply to the Office of the Dean of their home faculty and provide documentation. ACADEMIC ACCOMMODATION CANNOT BE GRANTED BY THE INSTRUCTOR OR DEPARTMENT. 4

WESTERN ACCESSIBILITY POLICY. Western has many services and programs that support the personal, physical, social and academic needs of students with disabilities. For more information and links to these services: http://accessibility.uwo.ca/ WESTERN SUPPORT SERVICES: Students who are in emotional/mental distress should refer to Mental Health @ Western http://www.uwo.ca/uwocom/mentalhealth/ for a complete list of options about how to obtain help. Tentative Schedule Date Topic Reading Assignment Page numbers are from Harris & Platzner, 6 th ed. Sept. 15 Course Introduction; Read through the syllabus very carefully and make a special Overview of the mythic note of test dates course policies, evaluation, etc. hero; Introduction to the Historical Background; Definitions; the Evidence for Greek and Roman Myths. Sept. 22 Creation of the World 1. Harris and Platzner, Ch. 1: Introduction to Greek Myth (pages 3-36); 2. Hesiod, Theogony (pages 88-105) Sept. 29 No class Oct. 6 Creation of Humans Hesiod, Works and Days (pages 128-133) Oct. 13 A later perspective on divine politics from Athenian Tragedy d.pdf Oct. 20 The Olympian Family: Zeus, Hera, Hestia, Poseidon, Ares, Aphrodite, Demeter, Persephone, Hades Prometheus Bound; read the play at this link: http://www.falcontheater.org/page5/files/prometheus%20boun 1. Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite; read at this link: http://www.theoi.com/text/homerichymns3.html#5 2. excerpt from Homer, Odyssey: The Loves of Ares and Aphrodite (pages 205-208) 3. Homeric Hymn to Demeter (pages 156-167) Oct. 27 Apollo and Artemis Homeric Hymn to Apollo; read at this link: http://www.theoi.com/text/homerichymns1.html#3 Nov. 3 Athena, Hephaestus, Homeric Hymn to Hermes (pages 209-223) Hermes Nov. 10 Dionysus; The Underworld; 1. Homeric Hymn to Dionysus; read at this link: www.theoi.com/text/homerichymns3.html#7 2. Chapter 9: Land of No Return (pages 259-87) Nov. 17 Term Test 7-8 pm Nov. 24 Early Heroes: Perseus Chapter 10: Heroes of Myth (pages 275-294) and Heracles Dec. 1 Jason, Theseus and Phaethon; Female Heroic Models 1. Chapter 10 (pages 295-307) 2. Chapter 11: Heroines of Myth (pages 308-330) Dec. 8 Trojan War: Causes Read ahead 5

Jan. 5 The Trojan War: Iliad Homer, Iliad (pages 352-423) (Achilles) Jan. 12 The Trojan War: Iliad Homer, Iliad (con t); The Fall of Troy Jan. 19 Returns: Odysseus Homer, Odyssey (pages 445-501) Jan. 26 Odysseus and Penelope Homer, Odyssey Feb. 2 Returns: Agamemnon; Clytemnestra; 1. Aeschylus, Agamemnon (pages 601-632) 2. Aeschylus, Eumenides (pages 633-655) Myth and Ritual Feb. 9 Term Test 7-8 pm Feb. 16 Reading Week Feb. 23 Oedipus Sophocles, Oedipus Rex (pages 679-727) Mar. 1 Tragic Marriage Euripides, Medea (pages 779-817) Mar. 8 Amazons and Bacchants Euripides, Bacchae (pages 528-581) Mar. 15 Roman Myth Chapter 18: The Roman Vision (pages 821-839) Mar. 22 A Roman Hero: Aeneas Virgil, Aeneid (pages 857-923) Mar. 29 Ovid Ovid, Metamorphoses (pages 932-963) April 5 Summary Etruscan bronze she-wolf from Rome, 6 th -5 th century BCE. The infants were added during the Renaissance 6