2056 |
RICHARD CECIL |
MW 1:15-2:30 pm |
HU 108 |
***PLEASE NOTE: THIS CLASS IS BEING REPLACED BY HHC-H 211, CLASS NUMBER 35755. HON-H 211, CLASS NUMBER 2056, WILL BE CANCELED. CHECK iGPS FOR UPDATES.*** THE CHANGE IS IN NUMBER AND TITLE ONLY — HHC-H 211 CARRIES THE SAME GEN ED AND CASE CREDIT AS HON-H 211, INCLUDING A&H AND IW.
This fall we will focus on the qualities that make a person a hero(ine), in the eyes of ancient authors, and compare those qualities with ones we admire today. Beginning with Gilgamesh’s heroic struggle to overcome death, and ending with Satan’s struggle to undermine God’s (according to Milton) plan for mankind, we will read, discuss, and write about ten of the ancient and early modern world’s greatest accounts of heroism. In the final week and a half, we will discuss first-person accounts of heroes written by each of the members of the class.
Written work for the course will consist of daily written discussion questions, three critical discussions of 3-5 pages, and a final 6-10 page creative paper.
Course texts: Gilgamesh, Homer’s Iliad & Odyssey, Virgil’s Aenead,
Njal’s Saga
Sophocles’s Antigone & Oedipus Rex
Seneca’s Trojan Women
Shakespeare’s Coriolanus & Hamlet
Milton’s Paradise Lost.
This fall we will focus on the qualities that make a person a hero(ine), in the eyes of ancient authors, and compare those qualities with ones we admire today. Beginning with Gilgamesh’s heroic struggle to overcome death, and ending with Satan’s struggle to undermine God’s (according to Milton) plan for mankind, we will read, discuss, and write about ten of the ancient and early modern world’s greatest accounts of heroism. In the final week and a half, we will discuss first-person accounts of heroes written by each of the members of the class.
Written work for the course will consist of daily written discussion questions, three critical discussions of 3-5 pages, and a final 6-10 page creative paper.
Course texts: Gilgamesh, Homer’s Iliad & Odyssey, Virgil’s Aenead,
Njal’s Saga
Sophocles’s Antigone & Oedipus Rex
Seneca’s Trojan Women
Shakespeare’s Coriolanus & Hamlet
Milton’s Paradise Lost.