| source City University of New York (X) |
level |
department Greek (X) |
Study of the fundamentals of the language in preparation for reading literary works and for linguistic studies.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Review of basic morphology and syntax. Readings from the speeches of Lysias, the dialogues of Plato, or the essays of Xenophon.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Readings from the Iliad and the Odyssey.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Continuation of Greek 1. Review of fundamentals. Readings from Greek prose and poetry.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
An investigation of ancient Greek athletics as a cultural phenomenon with special attention to the nature of the various athletic events and the social context in which these competitions took place. Analysis of representative ancient Greek (and some Roman) texts (epic, history, philosophy, tragedy, comedy, medical writings, epigraphy) and relevant iconographical evidence. Comparison with modern athletics.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
One tragedy of Aeschylus and one of Sophocles. Close analysis of language, meter, and dramatic structure. Survey of modern critical perspectives.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
One tragedy of Euripides and one comedy of Aristophanes. Close analysis of language, meter, and dramatic structure. Survey of modern critical perspectives.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Athenian democracy and political leadership in the fifth century B.C. Miltiades, Themistocles, and Pericles. Readings from Herodotus and Thucydides.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Selected readings from Plato and Aristotle. Contrasting views of society and political leadership.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Close readings of ancient Greek orators, including, but not necessarily limited to, Isocrates, Demosthenes, and Aischines. Study of the particular genres of forensic and epideictic oratory and their conventions.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Intensive reading program in Greek. Improvement of reading skills and knowledge of Greek syntax through the close reading of both prose and poetry. Regular prose composition exercises. The following texts will be read: Plato, Republic, Book 1; Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War, selections from Books 6 and 7; Lysias 1; Socrates, Panegyricus, selections; Demosthenes, Third Philippic; Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound; Sophocles, Ajax; the Homeric Hymn to Demeter; and selected Odes of Pindar.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Writing of Greek prose exercises. Review of Greek forms and syntax.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Studies in a genre, period, or author not covered by the regular course offerings.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Translation of Greek texts to supplement classics courses.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Close readings of ancient Greek prose fiction, including, but not necessarily limited to, Lucian, Longus, and Heliodoros. Study of the literary styles of these authors as well as their predecessors and influences, including Menander, Homer, and Theocritus.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Study in an author, period, or genre. Independent research.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Bibliographical resources for research using Greek texts. Directed research and paper.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
This course is designed to further develop language skills. The relationship between speaking, reading, and writing is emphasized.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
This course is designed to further develop language skills. The relationship between speaking, reading, and writing is emphasized.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
This laboratory course is designed to maintain foreign language skills during an interruption in the study sequence. Individual instruction is directly related to students' particular field of interest.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
GRK 101 and 102 constitute a two-semester sequential unit of instruction designed for students who have had no previous training in Greek. The objective of this sequence is to train the student to read graded passages of Greek literature chosen from ancient authors.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Concludes the study of syntax and vocabulary started in GRK 101 and begins the reading of continuous Greek texts.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Plato's account of the trial and death of Socrates as presented in the apology, Crito, and Phaedo. Readings of selections, chiefly from the apology.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Introduction to the epic. Readings from the Iliad.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page
Introduction to the koine Greek. Selected readings from the New Testament.
Score: 8.762455 Details | Listing | Web page