Marc Witkin
Eve Adler Professor of Classics
 
          - Office
- Twilight Hall 213
- Tel
- (802) 443-5664
- witkin@middlebury.edu
- Office Hours
- Fall 25: Tuesday/Thursday 10-12 or by appointment
Courses Taught
      
        
          CLAS 0150
                      Current
                            
        Greek and Roman Epic Poetry
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Greek and Roman Epic Poetry
 Would Achilles and Hector have risked their lives and sacred honor had they understood human life and the Olympian gods as Homer portrays them in the Iliad? Why do those gods decide to withdraw from men altogether following the Trojan War, and why is Odysseus the man Athena chooses to help her carry out that project? And why, according to the Roman poet Vergil, do these gods command Aeneas, a defeated Trojan, to found an Italian town that will ultimately conquer the Greek cities that conquered Troy, replacing the Greek polis with a universal empire that will end all wars of human freedom? Through close study of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, and Vergil's Aeneid, we explore how the epic tradition helped shape Greece and Rome, and define their contributions to European civilization. 3 hrs. lect., 1 hr. disc.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          CLAS 0152
                                Upcoming
                  
        Greek Tragedy
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Greek Tragedy
 A survey of selected tragedies by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, exploring the relation between tragedy and political freedom and empire in fifth century B.C. Athens. The course examines the tragic poets' use of traditional Greek myths to question not only the wisdom of contemporary Athenian imperialism but also traditional Greek views on relations between the sexes; between the family and the city; between man's presumed dignity and his belief in gods. Mythical and historical background is supplied through additional readings from Homer and Thucydides. The course asks how the tragedians managed to raise publicly, in the most solemn religious settings, the kind of questions for which Socrates was later put to death. The course culminates in a reading of Aristotle's Poetics. 3 hrs. lect., 1 hr. disc.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          CLAS 0420
                                Upcoming
                  
        Seminar Classical Literature
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Seminar in Classical Literature: Humanism of Herodotus
 Herodotus (485-424 BC), “the Father of History”, is also regarded as the first sociologist and ethnographer. The plan and argument of his work, however, including its many fantastic stories, disclose a philosophic intention that resists easy categorization. Herodotus’ subject is the “Greek miracle”: how the tiny and fractious cities of Greece took concerted action against the overwhelming might of the Persian kings who invaded Greece in 490 and 479 BC. The story of this unlikely triumph of political freedom and limited government over despotic empire is told against the background of the Afro-Asiatic origins of Greek civilization, which Herodotus uncovers in wide-ranging investigations of the customs and religions of Greece, Lydia, Media, Persia, Egypt, Libya, and Scythia. In this seminar we will pursue a close reading of Herodotus in translation; the seminar is open to all students with some previous background in Greek and/or Roman literature. 3 hrs. sem.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          CLAS 0450
                            
        History of Class Lit
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
History of Classical Literature 
 A comprehensive overview of the major literary, historical, and philosophical works of Greece and Rome. Greek authors studied include Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Herodotus, Aristophanes, Thucydides, Plato, and Aristotle. Roman authors include Lucretius, Cicero, Livy, Vergil, Petronius, and Tacitus. Required of senior majors in Classics/Classical Studies (see CLAS 0701 below) and open to all interested students with some background in Greek and Roman literature, history, or philosophy. 3 hrs. lect.
Terms Taught
      
        
          CLAS 0500
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Independent Study
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Independent Study
 (Approval required)
Terms Taught
      
        
          CLAS 0505
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Ind Senior Project
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
(Approval Required)
Terms Taught
      
        
          CLAS 0700
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Sr Essay Classics/Cy
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Senior Essay for Classics/Classical Studies Majors
 (Approval required)
Terms Taught
      
        
          CLAS 0701
                            
        Hist of Class Lit: Gen Exam
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
History of Classical Literature 
 A comprehensive overview of the major literary, historical, and philosophical works of Greece and Rome. Greek authors studied include Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Herodotus, Aristophanes, Thucydides, Plato, and Aristotle. Roman authors include Lucretius, Cicero, Livy, Vergil, Petronius, and Tacitus. Required of senior majors in Classics/Classical Studies. 3 hrs. lect.
Terms Taught
      
        
          FYSE 1154
                            
        Euripides and Athens
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Euripides and Athens
 Was the tragic genius of Euripides (480?-406 BC) corrupted by the atheistic rationalism of the sophists and the philosophy of Socrates (470-399 BC), as their Athenian contemporary, the comic poet Aristophanes, alleged? Nietzsche makes that view the basis of his attack on Socrates in The Birth of Tragedy (1872). Or, was Euripides in fact "the most tragic of the poets," as Aristotle argued in his Poetics, written during the half century after Euripides' death in 406 BC? In this course we discuss twelve of Euripides' extant plays in the context of 5th c. BC Greek political and intellectual history, with the help of Thucydides, Aristophanes, Plato, Aristotle, Nietzsche, and some modern critics. 3 hrs. sem.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          GREK 0101
                                Upcoming
                  
        Beginning Greek
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Beginning Greek I
 This course is a rapid and intensive introduction to classical Greek for beginners. The aim of the course is to prepare students to read the major authors of Greek literature. In addition to a systematic study of grammar and syntax, we will also read excerpts from a variety of ancient authors.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          GREK 0301
                      Current
                            
        Readings in Greek Literature I
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Readings in Greek Literature I
 Readings in major authors. Students should have had some formal study of Greek and should consult with the instructor during the first week of classes to determine whether or not the class is at the appropriate level. 3 hrs. lect.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          GREK 0302
                            
        Readings in Greek Lit II
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Readings in Greek Literature II
 Readings in major authors. Students should have had some formal study of Greek and should consult with the instructor during the first week of classes to determine whether or not the class is at the appropriate level. 3 hrs. lect.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          LATN 0302
                            
        Readings Latin Literature II
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Readings in Latin Literature II: Vergil’s Aeneid*
 Readings in major authors. 3 hrs. lect.
Terms Taught