Unit name | Time, Temporality and Texts |
---|---|
Unit code | CLAS37019 |
Credit points | 20 |
Level of study | H/6 |
Teaching block(s) |
Teaching Block 2 (weeks 13 - 24) |
Unit director | Emeritus Professor. Kennedy |
Open unit status | Not open |
Pre-requisites |
None, |
Co-requisites |
None. |
School/department | Department of Classics & Ancient History |
Faculty | Faculty of Arts |
'Intellectual models - whether pertaining to the natural or the social world, to history or psychology, to ethics or politics - implicitly or explicitly depend on a specific sense of time' (Morson). In this unit, as well as looking at the ways in which time has been conceptualized, past and present, we shall be examining a variety of texts, visual as well as written, 'modern' as well as 'ancient', to see how different types of writing and representation at different periods play with notions of time(coordinating it with the time of reading or viewing, speeding it up, slowing it down, even reversing it)and with the human experience of time to create different effects (e.g. inevitability, irony, suspense,pathos). Therefore we shall be looking at treatments of time in ancient epic, tragedy, historiography and philosophy and in more recent treatments of time in the novel, film and in 'counterfactual' history.
The aims of this unit are:
On successful completion of this unit, students should:
Seminars
One essay of 3,000 words (50%) and one examination of 90 minutes (50%).
Homer, Odyssey (Lattimore tr.)
Sophocles, Oedipus the King (Fagles tr.)
Virgil, Aeneid (Penguin, West tr.)
Augustine, Confessions 8 and 11 (Chadwick, tr.)
Selections from Aristotle, Livy, Polybius, Hesiod
Saul Morson, G. Narrative and Freedom: The Shadows of Time (New Haven and London, 1994)