CLAS 3366: The Trojan War
CLAS 3366: The Trojan War
Syllabus
Greek Art and Archaeology: In Search of the Trojan War is an interdisciplinary course that explores ancient visual and literary narratives about the Trojan War together with the archaeology of Troy and it’s relationship to the “Homeric Question.” Did the Trojan War really take place, and if so, where and when? What is the relationship between the myth and the history? These themes will allow us to explore the art and archaeology of several different times periods and places in the ancient Mediterranean world as well as the literature of Archaic and Classical Greece. No prior knowledge of Greek literature or archaeology is required.
Grades: Attendance and participation (includes 2 unannounced quizzes) 15%; Test 1 25%; Test 2 25%; Test 3 25%; Final Essay 10%
Any student with a documented disability needing academic adjustments is requested to speak with the professors during the first two weeks of class. All discussions will be confidential. Students who have disabilities are encouraged to register with the Center for Students with DisABILITIES (713-743-5400 or www.uh.edu/csd).
Required Reading:
Introduction to Aegean Art, by P. Betancourt (ISBN: 978-1931534215)
The Trojan War, by C. Thomas and C. Conant. (ISBN 978-0-8061-3874-9)
The Iliad of Homer, in any translation. The one by Richmond Lattimore (now in a new edition with an introduction by Richard Martin, 2011, ISBN: 978-0-226-47049-8) is available at the UH bookstore. A free electronic translation is available on Blackboard.
The Trojan Women of Euripides, in any translation. I have ordered to the bookstore Euripides’ The Trojan Women and Other Plays (9780192839879), which contains this play. A free electronic translations is available on Blackboard.
*Other readings on the syllabus (*marked with an asterisk) will be available on Blackboard.
Schedule of readings, assignments, and discussions:
A. The Homeric Questions
8/28 Introduction to the class and “the Homeric Question”; the Trojan Cycle of myth
Assignment: The Trojan War, Preface and Chapter 1
Recommended for those new to Greek myth: *Woodford pp. 12-64
9/4 Finding Troy and the Trojan War; Homer and the Oral Epic Tradition
Assignment: The Trojan War chapters 2 and 3
B. The Literary Evidence
9/11 Introduction to Homer and the wrath of Achilles; Greeks and Trojans
Assignment: Iliad books 1, 3, and 6
9/18 Achilles, Patroklos, and Hektor
Assignment: Iliad books 9, 16, and 18
9/25 The end of the Iliad; The Fall of Troy
Assignment: Iliad 22 and 24; The Trojan War chapter 4; *Virgil, Aeneid book 2
Recommended for those new to Greek myth: *Woodford pp. 88-119
10/2 Test 1 (covers sections A and B); Introduction to the Bronze Age Aegean
Recommended: Betancourt, Chapter 1
C. The Bronze Age Context (Art and Archaeology of the Aegean)
10/9 Cycladic Islands; Minoans
Assignment: Betancourt, Chapters 2, 3 and 5
Recommended: *Prehistoric Archaeology of the Aegean, Lesson 15
10/16 Thera
Assignment: Betancourt, Chapter 6; *Prehistoric Archaeology of the Aegean, Lesson 17; *Morris, “A Tale of Two Cities: The Miniature Frescoes from Thera and the Origins of Greek Poetry”
hint: a quiz is possible on this day!
10/23 Mycenaeans
Assignment: Betancourt, Chapter 7, 8, and 9
Recommended: *Wood In Search of the Trojan War pp. 47-93
10/30 Test 2 (covers section C); The Search for Troy and Review of the Homeric Question; Heinrich
Schliemann and the early excavators of Troy
Assignment: *Wood, In Search of the Trojan War pp. 19-46
D. The Archaeology of Troy and the “Homeric Question”
11/6 Troy: the site; environs and interactions
Assignment: *Bryce, The Trojans and Their Neighbors pp. 29-126
hint: a quiz is possible on this day!
E. The Iron Age Context
11/13 Iron Age art and culture; Archaeology and the "Homeric question" revisited
Assignment: *Morris, “Homer and the Iron Age.”; *Sherratt, “'Reading the texts': archaeology and the Homeric question.”
hint: a quiz is possible on this day!
F. The Meaning of Troy in Later Greek Culture
11/20 Test 3 (covers section D and E); Athens of the Classical Period, the Panathenaic Festival,
and the centrality of the Homeric Epics
11/27 THANKSGIVING BREAK
12/4 The sack of Troy in Classical Athenian literature and art; Troy and the Twenty-first Century
Assignment: *Euripides, Trojan Women; The Trojan War chapter 5; WATCH Troy (2004)
12/9 Final essay due by noon
Professor: Casey Dué Hackney. Office hours for Fall 2015 are TBA and by appointment, 601 Agnes Arnold Hall. Contact me by email at cldue (at) central.uh.edu