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Academic Year 2000/2001


Rome and the Caesars
CCIV 118 FA

In this course we will study the Rome of the first century C.E., as the inhabitants of the city struggled to come to terms with the radically changed circumstances of social and political life under the first Roman emperors. We will look back through the writings of the historian Tacitus and the biographer Suetonius at both the rules and the ruled: at the increasingly bizarre and monstrous members of the first imperial family, the Julio-Claudians, and at the psychological and moral consequences for th e traditional Roman ruling classes of living under an absolute ruler. In literature (the poet Ovid; the philosopher, tragic poet, and statesman Seneca; and the satirical novelist Petronius), we will trace the struggle to retain a sense of personal integrity and identity under an increasingly unpredictable and oppressive regime and the complementary tendency to see public life (or, in the case of Ovid, a love affair) as a succession of discrete theatrical and rhetorical performances that conceal or are inconsistent with a stable, unified personality.

MAJOR READINGS

Ovid, ART OF LOVE METAMORPHOSES (selections) Tacitus, ANNALS (selections) Suetonius, LIVES OF THE TWELVE CAESARS Seneca, APOCOLOCYNTOSIS FOUR TRAGEDIES LETTERS (selections) Petronius, SATYRICON Juvenal, SATIRES (selections) Robert Graves, I CLAUDIUS

EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS

Three short papers and a long term paper; readings from primary sources for every class.

ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS and/or COMMENTS

Regular class attendance expected.

COURSE FORMAT: Lecture

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Level: UGRD    Credit: 1    Gen Ed Area Dept: HA CLAS    Grading Mode: Student Option   

Prerequisites: NONE Links to Web Resources For This Course.

Last Updated on MAR-26-2001


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