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Printable Syllabus:

    in Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) format
    in Microsoft Word (.doc) format

Course description:
    We are Western Civilization. We are not merely influenced or shaped by that civilization. We are products of it. Our nation's tradition of civil rights, our ideas of virtue, the good life, affluence, music, and fashion are the culmination of events and ideas that have been shaped over three thousand years. It is important to understand who we are, what we assume about ourselves and others, and why we think what we think. This course attempts to sort out these aspects of our individual and collective identity.
    From Babylon to Baghdad this course surveys the values and identities of European civilization. Who did these peoples think they were? Who did they think they were not? What was the relationship between humanity, God (or the gods), and Nature? What were the ideals of male and female virtue? We will explore these ideas and more through religion and philosophy, literature and art from the different ages and societies spanning three millennia.

Requirements:

 

1. Short papers
          Euripides, Medea
          Christa Wolf, Medea

30%
  2. Quizzes 20%
  3. Final Exam 40%
  4. Showing up 10%

Procedure:
    Lecture and discussion. Questions are encouraged. Attendance is your responsibility. Please plan to attend all class sessions. Skipping classes will ruin your ability to do well in this course. Papers and other obligations may not be made up after the fact.
    * Bring the relevant readings to all class meetings.

Books:
Lynn Hunt, et al., The Making of the West, 3rd ed. + Sources of the West, vols. 1&2
Euripides, Medea
Christa Wolf, Medea
other supplemental readings as indicated on the Schedule page

Grades and other hassles
    Short Papers - On the two supplemental books, 15% each. Specifications forthcoming under Study Guides.
    Final Exam - In-class. Comprehensive. Details coming in June.
    Showing up - Woody Allen once quipped that 80% of life is just showing up. This is probably good for a B- / C+. Take some notes. Look at the textbook. Ask some questions. Turn in your papers, and study for the final. You’ll be fine.

Special Needs:
    Any student who has special needs, including but not limited to documented disabilities, is encouraged to identify himself or herself to the instructor so that those needs can be accommodated. If appropriate, such students might wish to contact Disabilities Services, which can provide assistance beyond this immediate course.

Fair Play:
    Plagiarism - failing to give credit for words or ideas that are not your own - is considered a crime in the university. Plagiarism constitutes theft of intellectual property. Even worse is the dishonesty of submitting someone else's work as your own.
    Plagiarism is easier to spot than one usually expects. To those of us who routinely read scholarly writing, phrases and ideas that do not sound like the ones we expect from students practically leap off the page. Continuing advances in Internet search capabilities make it as easy for faculty to locate the plagiarized source as it is for students.
    The consequences of being caught cheating are severe: immediate failure of the course. Appeals can be filed through the Office of Student Conduct & Academic Integrity. See pp. 14-18 of the Old Dominion University Catalog for 2010-2011 (under “Academic Dishonesty Procedures”) for further information.

 

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