Survey of Greek Civilization

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CARLETON UNIVERSITY 2015-2016 The College of the Humanities Humanities or Greek and Roman Studies Program: CLCV 1002A; Fall Term Tory Building, Room 360 Survey of Greek Civilization Professor: Office: E-mail: Classes: Office Hours: Dr. L. Gagné Patterson Hall, 2A35 laura.gagne@carleton.ca 7:30-9:00 pm 7:30-9:00 pm and 6:30-7:30 pm or by appointment Teaching Assistant: TBA Office: E-mail: Office Hours: OBJECTIVES Introduction to the study of Greek antiquity and the discipline of Classics and its methodologies. Greek culture and society are set in their historical contexts and studied through readings from representative ancient authors (in English translation) and through the art and architecture of the period. Precludes additional credit for CLCV 1000, and CLCV 1109. TEXTBOOK John Camp and Elizabeth Fisher, 2010. The World of the Ancient Greeks. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-28874-0 1

The text book is available at the University Bookstore. The book costs approximately $25. A copy is on course reserve at the library on a 4-hour loan basis. EVALUATION Assignment: 10 % Midterm Test: 35 % Map Test: 5% Final examination: 50 % PARTICIPATION This class will be taught using LectureTools, an interactive lecture format. Students will need to bring their laptops or tablets to class with them in order to participate in the lectures. Carleton does not have a full license for this program, so students will need to pay a small fee which gives you access to LectureTools for all your classes for the semester. Participation is not graded and use of LectureTools will not be mandatory but you will find the class more engaging and enjoyable if you are able to participate. Attendance is mandatory for this course. Much of the material covered is available only in the lectures. Students are expected to check their university email regularly and also to visit the course website on often. This is how I will communicate with you. ASSIGNMENTS There will be 2 short assignments that will be worth 5% each, totalling 10% of your final mark. The details of the assignments will be posted on under the button labelled "Assignment". You are required to visit two museums (The Canadian Museum of History and the Museum of Classical Antiquities at the University of Ottawa), but admission is free for you. See the instructions on the assignment for details. COURS E STRUCTURE The course material is divided into 5 modules. The format will be standard lectures. There will also be a map test in the final class. MIDTERM TEST There will be one midterm test worth 35% of the final mark. This will take place in class for the entire period. There will be a review in the class before the test. There are no 2

make-up tests or assignments. Students missing tests must produce proper documentation in order to be allowed to write. FINAL EXAMINATION The final exam will be cumulative, covering material from the entire course, but with an emphasis on material covered after the midterm (approximately 2/3). There will be a review during the last day of classes. STUDENT SUPPORT I will use for the administration of this course. You will find supplemental material, as well as assignments posted there. You will need to have a Carleton University email account and will need to make sure you can access. You can also send me an email anytime and I will do my best to answer within 24 hours. Please make sure you put the course code CLCV 1002 in the subject line of your email so that I will not think it is spam and delete it. This class is supported by PASS (Peer Assisted Study Sessions). You will be given more information about this in the first class. I highly encourage you to make use of this service. PASS is a learning enhancement program designed to organize and improve the ways in which students prepare for class outside of class. It is attached to historically difficult courses to provide students with a systematic and disciplined approach for processing the course material assigned by the professor. SCHEDULE Readings are taken from the textbook, unless otherwise specified. Readings from other sources are available for download as PDFs from. Date Topic Readings Module 1 Early Greece September 3 Course Introduction The Stone Age Chapter 1 pp. 7-22 Chapter 2 pp. 25-29 September 8 The Early Bronze Age Chapter 2 pp. 30-35 3

September 10 September 15 September 17 September 22 September 24 Module 2 September 29 October 1 October 6 Module 3 October 8 October 13 October 15 October 20 October 22 October 26-30 The Minoans Chapter 3 pp. 48-51 The Minoans Part 2 As above Thera Neer, pp. 37-40 The Mycenaeans Chapter 3 pp. 37-47 The Mycenaeans Part 2 As above The Age of Transition The Trojan War and the Collapse of the Bronze Age Palaces Chapter 3 pp. 52-57 The Collapse of Civilization and the Dark Ages Chapter 4 pp. 59-65 New Light from the East Chapter 4 The Orientalizing and Archaic Periods pp. 66-75 Growing Pains The Rise of the Greek City States (The Polis) Chapter 5 Athens pp. 77-109 Sparta Pomeroy et al. 2014, Chapter 4 pp. 99-120 The Persians Pomeroy et al. 2012, Chapter 5 pp. 207-210 Assignment #1 due! The Ionian Revolt and the Battle of Marathon Chapter 5 pp. 110 Pomeroy et al. 2012, Chapter 5 pp. 210-214 The battles of Thermopylae, Salamis, and Platea Chapter 5 pp. 110-115 Study Break No classes 4

Module 4 November 3 November 5 The Golden Age of Greece Greek art and architecture part 1 Midterm review Midterm test from the Stone Age to the Battle of Platea (does not include material from Greek art and architecture) Chapter 8 pp. 165-187 November 10 November 12 November 17 November 19 November 24 Module 5 November 26 December 1 December 3 Greek art and architecture part 2 Chapter 8 pp. 165-187 Classical Athens: Life in the Agora, Athenian Democracy Chapter 6 pp. 117-125 Classical Athens: The Acropolis Chapter 6 pp. 126-133 Intellectual Accomplishments: Philosophy, History, and Chapter 6 Theatre pp. 134-139 Ancient Greek Gods and Heroes Chapter 7 pp. 143-163 Decline and Epilogue The Peloponnesian War Sansone Philip of Macedon Chapter 9, pp.165-176; Sansone Chapter 11, pp. 219-220 (both PDFs Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic World The Greek Legacy Map Test Exam Review (cumulative exam from beginning of class) Assignment #2 due! on Chapter 9 pp. 189-199 Chapter 10 pp. 201-212 5

REGULATIONS COMMON TO ALL HUMANITIES COURSES COPIES OF WRITTEN WORK SUBMITTED Always retain for yourself a copy of all essays, term papers, written assignments or take-home tests submitted in your courses. PLAGIARISM The University Senate defines plagiarism as presenting, whether intentional or not, the ideas, expression of ideas or work of others as one s own. This can include: reproducing or paraphrasing portions of someone else s published or unpublished material, regardless of the source, and presenting these as one s own without proper citation or reference to the original source; submitting a take-home examination, essay, laboratory report or other assignment written, in whole or in part, by someone else; using ideas or direct, verbatim quotations, or paraphrased material, concepts, or ideas without appropriate acknowledgment in any academic assignment; using another s data or research findings; failing to acknowledge sources through the use of proper citations when using another s works and/or failing to use quotation marks; handing in "substantially the same piece of work for academic credit more than once without prior written permission of the course instructor in which the submission occurs." Plagiarism is a serious offence which cannot be resolved directly with the course s instructor. The Associate Deans of the Faculty conduct a rigorous investigation, including an interview with the student, when an instructor suspects a piece of work has been plagiarized. Penalties are not trivial. They can include a final grade of F for the course GRADING SYSTEM Letter grades assigned in this course will have the following percentage equivalents: A+ = 90-100 (12) B = 73-76 (8) C - = 60-62 (4) A = 85-89 (11) B- = 70-72 (7) D+ = 57-59 (3) A- = 80-84 (10) C+ = 67-69 (6) D = 53-56 (2) B+ = 77-79 (9) C = 63-66 (5) D - = 50-52 (1) F ABS DEF FND Failure. Assigned 0.0 grade points Absent from final examination, equivalent to F Official deferral (see "Petitions to Defer") Failure with no deferred exam allowed -- assigned only when the student has failed the course on the basis of inadequate term work as specified in the course outline. Standing in a course is determined by the course instructor subject to the approval of the Faculty Dean. WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT ACADEMIC PENALTY The last date to withdraw from FALL TERM courses is DEC. 7, 2015. The last day to withdraw from FALL/WINTER (Full Term) and WINTER term courses is APRIL 8, 2016. REQUESTS FOR ACADEMIC ACCOMMODATION You may need special arrangements to meet your academic obligations during the term because of disability, pregnancy or religious obligations. Please review the course outline promptly and write to me with any requests for academic accommodation during the first two weeks of class, or as soon as possible after the need for accommodation is known to exist. You can visit the Equity Services website to view the policies and to obtain more detailed information on academic accommodation at: carleton.ca/equity/accommodation/ Students with disabilities requiring academic accommodations in this course must register with the Paul Menton Centre for Students with Disabilities (PMC) for a formal evaluation of disability-related needs. Documented disabilities could include but not limited to mobility/physical impairments, specific Learning Disabilities (LD), psychiatric/psychological disabilities, sensory disabilities, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), and chronic medical conditions. Registered PMC students are required to contact the PMC, 613-520-6608, every term to ensure that your Instructor receives your Letter of Accommodation, no later than two weeks before the first assignment is due or the first in-class test/midterm requiring accommodations. If you only require accommodations for your formally scheduled exam(s) in this course, please submit your request for accommodations to PMC by Nov. 6, 2015 for the Fall term and March 6, 2016 for the Winter term. For more details visit the Equity Services website: carleton.ca/equity/accommodation/ PETITIONS TO DEFER If you miss a final examination and/or fail to submit a FINAL assignment by the due date because of circumstances beyond your control, you may apply a deferral of examination/assignment. If you are applying for a deferral due to illness you will be required to see a physician in order to confirm illness and obtain a medical certificate dated no later than one working day after the examination or assignment deadline. This supporting documentation must specify the date of onset of the illness, the degree of incapacitation, and the expected date of recovery. If you are applying for a deferral for reasons other than personal illness, please contact the Registrar s Office directly for information on other forms of documentation that we accept. Deferrals of a final assignment or take home, in courses without a final examination, must be supported by confirmation of the assignment due date, for example a copy of the course outline specifying the due date and any documented extensions from the course instructor. Deferral applications for examination or assignments must be submitted within 5 working days of the original final exam. ADDRESSES: (Area Code 613) College of the Humanities 520-2809 Greek and Roman Studies Office 520-2809 Religion Office 520-2100 Registrar's Office 520-3500 Student Academic Success Centre 520-7850 Paul Menton Centre 520-6608/TTY 520-3937 Writing Tutorial Service 520-2600 Ext. 1125 Learning Support Service 520-2600 Ext 1125 300 Paterson 300 Paterson 2A39 Paterson 300 Tory 302 Tory 501 Uni-Centre 4 th Floor Library 4 th Floor Library