教学大纲
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课程描述
本课程以奥古斯都和尼罗两个皇帝为重点,研究罗马皇帝如何通过艺术、建筑、铸币以及其它它方式来塑造和表现自己的形象,以及罗马时期残存下来的文学资源又如何巩固或推翻这种形象,还有这两种现象如何形成后古典时期对罗马皇帝的观感。研究内容涉及奥古斯都和尼罗统治时期罗马的艺术、建筑、铸币,苏埃托尼乌斯和塔西佗的著作,以及在《罗马帝国兴亡史》和《暴君焚城记》这类电影作品对皇帝的现代表达。
评分
| 活动 | 比列 |
|---|---|
| 课堂参与 | 25% |
| 论文一(五页) | 20% |
| 论文二(五页) | 20% |
| 论文三(十页) | 35% |
课堂参与
这门课程的成功需要学员在课堂上积极参与。总评成绩的25%来自课堂参与,依据如下:
- 出席每堂课
- 完成所有的阅读作业
- 积极参与研讨
论文
一般指南
要想论文取得高分,需在以下方面表现出色:
论据和结构
你的论文要力图让读者信服你对问题集提出答案的论点和论题。论题要在论文的介绍部分清楚明确地提出来。论文的正文要通过整理编排大量的古代历史数据,以清晰的结构,连贯的表达,和层层相扣的论述来支持你的论点。最后,结论要提醒读者你所支持的论题,同时表达该论点是如何与更广泛的历史内容联系。记住,你的论文是一篇评论性的分析文章。
知识与理解
论文要表现出你十分熟悉论点依据的古代资料:熟悉相关段落的细节以及整部作品。你对数据的论证分析能力,以及你对数据重要性的个人见解应在论文清楚地体现出来。
写作质量
你的论点应该用清楚、简明、易读的英语表达;不应出现语法、句法或拼写错误。精确和优雅的表述将得到奖励。
引用资料参考书目
你一定要注明数据的出处。每次无论是直接引用材料还只是简单地提到,都必须完整地列明出处。由于你的论文论据要依据大量的古老数据,因此有可能你会经常引用苏埃托尼乌斯和(或)塔西佗。古历史学界惯于在文章正文,而不是在脚注或尾注,引述古代作者。例如:塔西佗强调……(塔西佗《编年史》1.1)或苏埃托尼乌斯记叙……(苏埃托尼乌斯《尼罗》10)。由于你的论文要有大量的论据来支持你的论点,因此,文中会有很多这样的引述。
如果你要选择参考苏埃托尼乌斯和(或)塔西佗以外的现代数据来源,你必须完整地标明引文的出处。通常,这些在脚注标出。
抄袭
完整列明出处是避免抄袭的唯一方法。任何没有列明出处,就借用他人观点、论点或直接引用的行为,无论是有意还是无意,都是抄袭,必须避免。如果你不清楚抄袭的含义,请到麻省理工学院在线写作交流中心浏览〈数据出处的引述和使用方法〉,或查看人文图书馆的公告:《抄袭与如何避免抄袭》。
利用互联网
网上可以找到古代历史学家的许多有用数据,也有大量胡说八道的文章。请随意使用互联网;但需意识到你有责任对见到的内容作出判断,采用胡说八道的网站将会受到处罚。正如使用任何数据来源,你必需完整提供在互联网查阅的内容出处,包括该网页的题目和作者,编撰或最近更新的日期,链接地址以及你访问的日期。
正规的格式
所有论文必须遵守以下格式要求:
- 用12号的Arial字体,1.5倍的行距
- 标准的页边距。(左边距和右边距各1.25",页眉和页脚各1" )
论文迟交的处罚
论文应该按预定日期在上课开始时提交。任何论文在有关课堂开始之后提交都被视为迟交了一天。论文在预定日期一天后提交将被认作迟交了两天,如此类推。无故迟交,每迟交一天论文将受到降低一个等级的处罚(例如,由A-变为B+)。只有在有证据的严重情况才被接受为理由(如严重的健康问题或其它个人突发事件)。迟交的论文要送到Broadhead教授的信箱。
Description
Focusing on the emperors Augustus and Nero, this course investigates the ways in which Roman emperors used art, architecture, coinage and other media to create and project an image of themselves, the ways in which the surviving literary sources from the Roman period reinforced or subverted that image, and the ways in which both phenomena have contributed to post-classical perceptions of Roman emperors. Material studied will include the art, architecture, and coinage of Augustan and Neronian Rome, the works of Suetonius and Tacitus, and modern representations of the emperors such as those found in I, Claudius and Quo Vadis.
Grading
| ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
|---|---|
| Class Participation | 25% |
| Paper 1 (5 pages) | 20% |
| Paper 2 (5 pages) | 20% |
| Paper 3 (10 pages) | 35% |
Class Participation
The success of this course depends on the active participation of students in class meetings. The 25% of your overall grade coming from class participation will be based on the following:
- Attendance at all class meetings
- Completion of all reading assignments
- Active participation in seminar discussion
Papers
General Guidelines
Papers receiving high grades will excel in each of the following:
Argument and Structure
Your paper should seek to convince its reader of an argument, a thesis, offered in answer to one of the questions set. The thesis should be clearly stated in the introduction to the paper. The body of the paper should then seek to support your thesis by marshalling an abundance of evidence from the ancient sources in a clearly structured, coherent, and linear argument. Finally, a conclusion should remind your reader of the thesis you have been supporting and show how that thesis is relevant to a wider historical context. Remember throughout that your paper should be a work of critical analysis.
Knowledge and Understanding
Your paper should display a close knowledge of the ancient source(s) on which your argument rests: knowledge both of the details of relevant passages as well as of the work as a whole. Your ability to subject the sources to critical analysis and to come to your own understanding of their significance should also emerge clearly from your paper.
Quality of Writing
Your argument should be expressed in clear, concise, and readable English. There should be no errors of grammar, syntax, or spelling. Precision and elegance of expression will be rewarded.
Referencing
You must always acknowledge your sources. Every time you either quote directly from a source or even simply refer to a source, you must provide a full citation. Since this paper is intended to be written entirely from ancient sources, your citations will most likely be to Suetonius and/or Tacitus only. It is conventional in the field of ancient history to cite ancient authors in the text of an essay, not in footnotes or endnotes; so, for example: 'Tacitus here highlights... (Tacitus, Annals 1.1)' or 'Suetonius' description of... (Suetonius, Nero 10)'. Since your paper should include an abundance of ancient evidence in support of your argument, there should be many such citations along the way.
Should you choose to consult modern sources in addition to Suetonius and/or Tacitus themselves, you must be sure to provide full references to those sources. Such references should usually be provided in footnotes.
Plagiarism
Full referencing is the only way to avoid plagiarism. Any unacknowledged borrowing of ideas, arguments, or direct quotes - whether intentional or not - is plagiarism and must be avoided. If you are not sure what plagiarism is, go to the MIT Online Writing Communication Center and follow the 'Citing and Using Sources' link or see the Humanities Library's publication, Plagiarism and How to Avoid It.
Using the Internet
There is much of use to the ancient historian on the internet. There is also a lot of nonsense. Feel free to use the internet; but be aware that you are responsible for being critical of the material you encounter there and will be penalized for making use of sites that spout nonsense. As with any source, you must provide full references to material you consult on the internet, including the title and author of the page in question, the date on which it was written or last updated, the URL, and the date on which you accessed the site.
Formal Presentation
All papers must comply with the following presentational guidelines:
- Papers must be typed in 12-point Arial font, with 1½ line spacing.
- Standard margins (1.25" left and right, 1" top and bottom) must be used.
Penalty for Late Submission
Papers are due at the beginning of the lecture on the scheduled due date. Any paper submitted after the beginning of the relevant lecture will be considered late by one day. Any paper submitted on the day after the due date will be considered late by two days, and so on. Unexcused late submissions will incur a penalty of one partial grade step (e.g. from A- to B+) for each day late. Only serious and documented circumstances will be accepted as excuses (e.g. serious matters of health or other personal emergencies). Late papers should be submitted to Prof. Broadhead's mailbox.
