COML108 - Greek & Roman Mythology

Status
O
Activity
REC
Section number integer
406
Title (text only)
Greek & Roman Mythology
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
406
Section ID
COML108406
Course number integer
108
Registration notes
Registration also required for Lecture (see below)
Meeting times
R 01:45 PM-02:45 PM
Meeting location
COHN 203
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Michael Patrick Russo
Description
Myths are traditional stories that have endured many years. Some of them have to do with events of great importance, such as the founding of a nation. Others tell the stories of great heroes and heroines and their exploits and courage in the face of adversity. Still others are simple tales about otherwise unremarkable people who get into trouble or do some great deed. What are we to make of all these tales, and why do people seem to like to hear them? This course will focus on the myths of ancient Greece and Rome, as well as a few contemporary American ones, as a way of exploring the nature of myth and the function it plays for individuals, societies, and nations. We will also pay some attention to the way the Greeks and Romans themselves understood their own myths. Are myths subtle codes that contain some universal truth? Are they a window on the deep recesses of a particular culture? Are they entertaining stories that people like to tell over and over? Are they a set of blinders that all of us wear, though we do not realize it? We investigate these questions through a variety of topics creation of the universe between gods and mortals, religion and family, sex, love, madness, and death.
Course number only
108
Cross listings
CLST100406
Use local description
No

COML108 - Greek & Roman Mythology

Status
X
Activity
REC
Section number integer
405
Title (text only)
Greek & Roman Mythology
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
405
Section ID
COML108405
Course number integer
108
Registration notes
Registration also required for Lecture (see below)
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Description
Myths are traditional stories that have endured many years. Some of them have to do with events of great importance, such as the founding of a nation. Others tell the stories of great heroes and heroines and their exploits and courage in the face of adversity. Still others are simple tales about otherwise unremarkable people who get into trouble or do some great deed. What are we to make of all these tales, and why do people seem to like to hear them? This course will focus on the myths of ancient Greece and Rome, as well as a few contemporary American ones, as a way of exploring the nature of myth and the function it plays for individuals, societies, and nations. We will also pay some attention to the way the Greeks and Romans themselves understood their own myths. Are myths subtle codes that contain some universal truth? Are they a window on the deep recesses of a particular culture? Are they entertaining stories that people like to tell over and over? Are they a set of blinders that all of us wear, though we do not realize it? We investigate these questions through a variety of topics creation of the universe between gods and mortals, religion and family, sex, love, madness, and death.
Course number only
108
Cross listings
CLST100405
Use local description
No

COML108 - Greek & Roman Mythology

Status
O
Activity
REC
Section number integer
404
Title (text only)
Greek & Roman Mythology
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
404
Section ID
COML108404
Course number integer
108
Registration notes
Registration also required for Lecture (see below)
Meeting times
R 12:00 PM-01:00 PM
Meeting location
MEYH B5
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Michael Patrick Russo
Description
Myths are traditional stories that have endured many years. Some of them have to do with events of great importance, such as the founding of a nation. Others tell the stories of great heroes and heroines and their exploits and courage in the face of adversity. Still others are simple tales about otherwise unremarkable people who get into trouble or do some great deed. What are we to make of all these tales, and why do people seem to like to hear them? This course will focus on the myths of ancient Greece and Rome, as well as a few contemporary American ones, as a way of exploring the nature of myth and the function it plays for individuals, societies, and nations. We will also pay some attention to the way the Greeks and Romans themselves understood their own myths. Are myths subtle codes that contain some universal truth? Are they a window on the deep recesses of a particular culture? Are they entertaining stories that people like to tell over and over? Are they a set of blinders that all of us wear, though we do not realize it? We investigate these questions through a variety of topics creation of the universe between gods and mortals, religion and family, sex, love, madness, and death.
Course number only
108
Cross listings
CLST100404
Use local description
No

COML108 - Greek & Roman Mythology

Status
X
Activity
REC
Section number integer
403
Title (text only)
Greek & Roman Mythology
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
403
Section ID
COML108403
Course number integer
108
Registration notes
Registration also required for Lecture (see below)
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Description
Myths are traditional stories that have endured many years. Some of them have to do with events of great importance, such as the founding of a nation. Others tell the stories of great heroes and heroines and their exploits and courage in the face of adversity. Still others are simple tales about otherwise unremarkable people who get into trouble or do some great deed. What are we to make of all these tales, and why do people seem to like to hear them? This course will focus on the myths of ancient Greece and Rome, as well as a few contemporary American ones, as a way of exploring the nature of myth and the function it plays for individuals, societies, and nations. We will also pay some attention to the way the Greeks and Romans themselves understood their own myths. Are myths subtle codes that contain some universal truth? Are they a window on the deep recesses of a particular culture? Are they entertaining stories that people like to tell over and over? Are they a set of blinders that all of us wear, though we do not realize it? We investigate these questions through a variety of topics creation of the universe between gods and mortals, religion and family, sex, love, madness, and death.
Course number only
108
Cross listings
CLST100403
Use local description
No

COML108 - Greek & Roman Mythology

Status
O
Activity
REC
Section number integer
402
Title (text only)
Greek & Roman Mythology
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
402
Section ID
COML108402
Course number integer
108
Registration notes
Registration also required for Lecture (see below)
Meeting times
R 10:15 AM-11:15 AM
Meeting location
COHN 204
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Massimo De Sanctis Mangelli
Description
Myths are traditional stories that have endured many years. Some of them have to do with events of great importance, such as the founding of a nation. Others tell the stories of great heroes and heroines and their exploits and courage in the face of adversity. Still others are simple tales about otherwise unremarkable people who get into trouble or do some great deed. What are we to make of all these tales, and why do people seem to like to hear them? This course will focus on the myths of ancient Greece and Rome, as well as a few contemporary American ones, as a way of exploring the nature of myth and the function it plays for individuals, societies, and nations. We will also pay some attention to the way the Greeks and Romans themselves understood their own myths. Are myths subtle codes that contain some universal truth? Are they a window on the deep recesses of a particular culture? Are they entertaining stories that people like to tell over and over? Are they a set of blinders that all of us wear, though we do not realize it? We investigate these questions through a variety of topics creation of the universe between gods and mortals, religion and family, sex, love, madness, and death.
Course number only
108
Cross listings
CLST100402
Use local description
No

COML108 - Greek & Roman Mythology

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Greek & Roman Mythology
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML108401
Course number integer
108
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen.
Registration also required for Recitation (see below)
Meeting times
MW 10:15 AM-11:15 AM
Meeting location
STIT B6
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Peter T. Struck
Description
Myths are traditional stories that have endured many years. Some of them have to do with events of great importance, such as the founding of a nation. Others tell the stories of great heroes and heroines and their exploits and courage in the face of adversity. Still others are simple tales about otherwise unremarkable people who get into trouble or do some great deed. What are we to make of all these tales, and why do people seem to like to hear them? This course will focus on the myths of ancient Greece and Rome, as well as a few contemporary American ones, as a way of exploring the nature of myth and the function it plays for individuals, societies, and nations. We will also pay some attention to the way the Greeks and Romans themselves understood their own myths. Are myths subtle codes that contain some universal truth? Are they a window on the deep recesses of a particular culture? Are they entertaining stories that people like to tell over and over? Are they a set of blinders that all of us wear, though we do not realize it? We investigate these questions through a variety of topics creation of the universe between gods and mortals, religion and family, sex, love, madness, and death.
Course number only
108
Cross listings
CLST100401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

COML107 - Topics: Freshman Seminar: Italian Fashion

Status
C
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Topics: Freshman Seminar: Italian Fashion
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML107401
Course number integer
107
Registration notes
Freshman Seminar
All Readings and Lectures in English
Meeting times
MW 03:30 PM-05:00 PM
Meeting location
LERN 102
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Giuseppe Bruno-Chomin
Description
This course will adopt fashion, which theorists and scholars consider a system of signification and a codified language, as a critical lens to observe important events and movements in Italian history and culture. Specifically, the course will explore Italian society’s economic, social, and political transformations from the Renaissance to the present through the representation of clothes and accessories as they appear in literary texts, paintings, and films. Students will focus on specific topics—such as the role played by clothing in constructing social and gender identity, communicating political and cultural messages during the Renaissance and Fascism, and transforming the natural anatomy of human bodies. At the end of the course, students will learn to look critically at fashion’s socio-cultural and political meanings and acquire a basic knowledge of the evolution and changes of Italian fashion and its influence on the formation of Italy and Italians. Students will discuss works by Michelangelo Antonioni, Agnolo Bronzino, Baldassare Castiglione, Carlo Collodi, Elena Ferrante, Veronica Franco, Rosa Genoni, Agostino Lampugnani, Paola Masino, Alberto Moravia, Matilde Serao, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, Paolo Sorrentino, and Cesare Vecellio among others. The course will be taught in English; material and readings will be in English.

Course number only
107
Cross listings
CIMS014401, ITAL100401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
Yes

COML106 - Ancient Drama

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Ancient Drama
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML106401
Course number integer
106
Meeting times
TR 12:00 PM-01:30 PM
Meeting location
PCPE 225
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Scheherazade Jehan Khan
Description
This course will introduce students to some of the greatest works of dramatic literature in the western canon. We will consider the social, political, religious and artistic functions of drama in ancient Greece and Rome, and discuss both differences and similarities between ancient drama and modern art forms. The course will also pursue some broader goals: to improve students skills as readers and scholarly critics of literature, both ancient and modern; to observe the implications of form for meaning, in considering, especially, the differences between dramatic and non-dramatic kinds of cultural production: to help students understand the relationship of ancient Greek and Roman culture to the modern world; and to encourage thought about some big issues, in life as well as in literature: death, heroism, society, action and meaning.
Course number only
106
Cross listings
CLST107401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Use local description
No

COML101 - Introduction To Folklore

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Introduction To Folklore
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML101401
Course number integer
101
Registration notes
Humanities & Social Science Sector
Meeting times
TR 10:15 AM-11:45 AM
Meeting location
COHN 392
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Dan Ben-Amos
Description
The purpose of the course is to introduce you to the subjects of the discipline of Folklore, their occurrence in social life and the scholarly analysis of their use in culture. As a discipline folklore explores the manifestations of expressive forms in both traditional and moderns societies, in small-scale groups where people interact with each face-to-face, and in large-scale, often industrial societies, in which the themes, symbols, and forms that permeate traditional life, occupy new positions, or occur in different occasions in everyday life. For some of you the distinction between low and high culture, or artistic and popular art will be helpful in placing folklore forms in modern societies. For others, these distinction will not be helpful. In traditional societies, and within social groups that define themselves ethnically, professionally, or culturally, within modern heterogeneous societies, and traditional societies in the Americas, Africa, Asia, Europe and Australia, folklore plays a more prominent role in society, than it appears to plan in literati cultures on the same continents. Consequently the study of folklore and the analysis of its forms are appropriate in traditional as well as modern societies and any society that is in a transitional phase.
Course number only
101
Cross listings
FOLK101401, RELS108401, NELC181401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

COML100 - Intro. To Literary Study: Global Novel

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Intro. To Literary Study: Global Novel
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML100401
Course number integer
100
Meeting times
MW 05:15 PM-06:45 PM
Meeting location
BENN 231
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Rita Barnard
Description
Introduction to Comparative Literature/Introduction to Literary Studies

This course has three broad aims: first, it will introduce students to a selection of compelling contemporary narratives; second, it will provide prospective students of literature and film, as well as interested students headed for other majors, with fundamental skills in literary, visual, and cultural analysis; and, third, it will encourage a meditation on the function of literature and culture in our world, where commodities, people, and ideas have been constantly in motion. Questions for discussion will therefore include: the meaning of terms like “globalization,” “translation,” and “world literature”; the transnational reach and circulation of texts; migration and engagement with “others”; violence, trauma, and memory; terrorism and the state; and the ethic of cosmopolitanism. Our collective endeavor will be to think about narrative forms as modes of mediating and engaging with the vast and complex world we inhabit today.

In the course of the semester, we will study about eight works of fiction and four films, as well as a selection of pertinent critical essays that will provide the terminology and theoretical framework for our conversations. The following works of fiction are likely to be included (though note that the list might change a bit and possibly be cut): Salman Rushdie, East, West; Ivan Vladislavic, selected stories and The Exploded View; Dinaw Mengestu, The Beautiful Things that Heaven Bears; Junot Diaz, The Short Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao; Karen Yamashita, Tropic of Orange; Juan Gabriel Vasquez, The Sound of Things Falling; Moshin Hamid, The Reluctant Fundamentalist; Aminatta Forna, The Hired Man; and David Mitchell, Ghostwritten. Films: Babel, Dirty Pretty Things, Even the Rain, and Syriana. Written requirements: 7 to 10-page midterm and final papers (topics will be provided). Note that this course will count as one of the core requirements for the Comparative Literature major.


Course number only
100
Cross listings
ENGL100401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Use local description
Yes