Classical Studies explores the worlds of Ancient Greece and Rome through their literature, material culture, history, and society from the Bronze Age to Late Antiquity. The major examines big questions which are just as relevant today as they were thousands of years ago. What is the best form of government: republic, democracy, or monarchy? What were the experiences of marginalised groups and how do we reconstruct their voices? How do we cope with grief and loss? Is there such a thing as a just war? How should we remember problematic individuals? What kinds of machines are most useful to humans? It is possible for one individual to change the world? The Ancient Greeks and Romans struggled with these and other fundamental questions about the human experience, as captured in their histories, poems, speeches, letters, arts and artefacts. Classical Studies at ANU places students at the heart of these conversations.
Our students join Thucydides and Aristophanes as they explore the devastating war between Athens and Sparta through Pericles’ soaring funeral oration and a wickedly hilarious female sex-strike, accompany Alexander the Great and Cleopatra at court and on campaign, and listen to Cicero and Seneca as they ponder the fall of the Roman Republic and the rise of the emperors. Yet our major is not merely the story of these prominent figures. Classical Studies students also uncover the world of Roman children -- simultaneously joyful and precarious -- through archaeology and inscriptions, discover the language of love and longing in the poetry of Sappho and Catullus, explore the many stories of innovation and creation, from Greek potters to the mathematics of Archimedes and the machines of Hero of Alexandria, and trace the journeys of pilgrims and holy men and women to Rome and Jerusalem. But Classical Studies is not a blind celebration of the past. The Greeks and Romans created beautiful monuments and works of art, from the Parthenon to the Dying Gaul, but they also endorsed enslavement and manipulated political rhetoric to justify colonialism and imperialism, a legacy which still haunts our contemporary world. The major devotes significant attention to the reception of Classical Studies in literature, film, art, and popular culture, in order to explore this complicated legacy and the ways in which Greece and Rome have been misappropriated by states, individuals, and pressure groups.
A major in Classical Studies complements study in Latin, Ancient Greek, English, Modern European Languages, History, Philosophy, Art and Design, Law, Politics, Archaeology, Arab and Islamic Studies, Asian Studies, and numerous other areas.
Learning Outcomes
- demonstrate an understanding of the history, literature, society, and material culture of Ancient Greece and Rome;
- think critically about, and formulate answers to, fundamental human questions raised by the study of Ancient Greece and Rome;
- critically analyse a wide range of literary genres, historical documents, and material objects from Ancient Greece and Rome and the modern scholarly discussions of these texts and objects;
- construct evidence-based arguments in visual, oral, written or digital formats; and
- debate and discuss the complicated legacy of Ancient Greece and Rome, including in contemporary Australia.
Relevant Degrees
Requirements
This Classical Studies major requires the completion of 48 units, of which:
A maximum of 18 units may come from the completion of 1000-level courses
A minimum of 18 units must come from the completion of 3000-level courses.
The 48 units must consist of:
A minimum of 12 units and a maximum of 18 units from the completion of courses on the following list:
CLAS1003 - Classical Mythology (6 units)
CLAS1005 - Rome: The Story of an Empire (6 units)
CLAS1006 - Ancient Greece: History, Culture and Society (6 units)
A minimum of 12 units from the completion of courses on the following list:
CLAS2013 - The Muse and the Machine: The Arts, Technology, and Society in Graeco-Roman Antiquity (6 units)
CLAS2014 - Democrats, Tyrants, and Emperors: The Art of Government in the Ancient Mediterranean (6 units)
CLAS2015 - Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic World: An Age of Transformation and Discovery (6 units)
HIST2070 - Emperors, Pilgrims, and Crusaders: The World of Byzantium (6 units)
A minimum of 18 units from the completion of courses on the following list:
CLAS3001 - Rome: The Eternal City from Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages (6 units)
CLAS3002 - Life, Love, and Loss in Ancient Greece and Rome (6 units)
CLAS3003 - Faith and Belief in Ancient Greece and Rome (6 units)
CLAS3100 - Remembering and Forgetting in Imperial Greece and Rome (6 units)
HIST3110 - Approaches to History (6 units)
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