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审定:无
翻译:刘柏志(简介并寄信)
编辑:王晶(简介并寄信)

课程描述

奥古斯都凯撒统治下黄金时期的罗马文学,是在政治体制从共和转变至帝制的过渡时期中产生,这些作品对西方的欧洲和美国社会,有着深远且划时代的影响。它们从根本上建立起美学的精细淬炼、对哲学研究的热切渴望,和政治的雄心壮志,这些仍为塑造现代文化的长久典范。本课程将会从历史的观点,替这些最先产生的不朽古典文学巨作,提供在文化背景上的精密审视,藉以来探讨拉丁文学的黄金时期。而课程阅读将会注重在奥古斯都凯撒统治下,从政府的共和体制转变至帝国的过渡时期,个别作家对罗马社会所经历深刻结构改变的各类回应。独特的焦点将会放在透过文字的社会重组和自我重建、公共与私有尺度的改变、阶级和性别所扮演的角色,以及艺术与娱乐间的关连性。著作涵盖广泛的文学类型,包括凯撒、西塞罗、卡图拉斯、李维、维吉尔、贺拉斯和奥维德等人的作品,并外加上迪奥的历史著作,来协助了解历史背景。

HASS-CI课程的标准

人文、艺术和社会科学的重点沟通课程必须缴交3至5次的作业(至少20页),并至少有一次复查和重交。HASS-CI课程藉由口头报告、学生的讨论或者课堂参与提供学生大量的口头表达的机会。为确保学生充分的写作和口头表达机会,一堂HASS-CI课程的最大学生容量为18人,除非此课程教授不按照课表进行(该院系的主管人员为导师)。在此情况下,如有一位写作导师参与此课程,学生人数可增至25人。

评分标准

本课程的期末成绩将会按照以下表格内的项目计算:

课程活动 分数百分比
课程参与 25%
读书心得(3份,每份2页) 15%
课内计划 5%
研究计划写作(5页) 15%
期末报告草稿(6到10页) 10%
期末报告(10页) 30%

课程参与

积极参与课堂讨论在期末成绩占重要的部分。希望学生在每堂课都对指定的读物有充分的准备,并且随时准备发言。

读书心得报告

三份短篇报告(长度为2页、隔行、字型大小12、四边各留1吋空白页边)提供学生机会来表达阅读著作时的个人的看法。 这些作业的重点应在该日指定阅读的作品里,让你感到有趣、好奇或疑惑的特别一段,某个惊喜使你超过当初对文章的期许。在辨别出该文章段落的重要特征和特殊处后,检查这些特征的意义跟重要性,并且解释它们在字里行间的暗示、重要性、目的和功能。

课内计划

在学期里会安排课内计划,学生可从最近读过的教材中学习到的知识加以应用。另外,事前宣布(或没宣布)的小考 – 偶尔会用以测验学生对作品的理解力。没宣布的小考分数只有成绩是A-以上时才会列入;而宣布过的小考分数全都会计算在成绩内。

研究计划

缴交一份关于罗马市民生活的独立研究计划。学生会对全班做一次10分钟的口头报告,表达自己有何发现,并在一周后缴交正式的研究报告以获得学期成绩。

期末报告

学生在交期末报告两个半星期之前,先交期末报告的草稿。草稿在一星期后发还,指导教授会在草稿上留下意见与建议。最后的定稿交出之前,必须包括所有的改正、增加,或是详述的部分。报告内容根据其逻辑辩证一致性、证据的审慎使用、概念的条理发展,和修辞效果的基础上评估。

出席率规定

每次上课必须准时。无故缺席会在评分的“课堂参与部分”扣除5分,迟到则扣除3分。在上课开始10分钟后才到达,却无任何理由者视为迟到。缺席和迟到只有在预先和当堂导师联系并获得批准的情况下才能免除扣分。

报告迟交规定

在和导师协商后,任何读书报告和口头报告可自动延后一堂课缴交,若还延迟缴交,会随着迟交的课堂数目依次扣除学年总分的1/3。 学期报告不得迟交。

报告重写规定

重写的读书报告需符合下列要求:

  1. 原稿按时缴交。
  2. 学生与导师当面讨论报告。
  3. 报告重头写起而非根据旧稿修改。
  4. 重写报告的缴交时间,需在原稿退回的一周内。

重写报告的最高得分为B+。期末报告的初稿需在缴交定稿的两周半前交出,此最终成绩也会取代初稿的成绩。

报告抄袭规定

所有在课外取得的资讯必须在缴交的作业中标示清楚。所有从他人著作中取得的构想、论点和直接用词必须标示并做适当注脚。其他引言必须清楚标明以和学生自己的作业区分。关于适当形式的进一步标准,请查阅麻省学院网站--抄袭部分。


Description

Roman Literature of the Golden Age of Augustus Caesar, produced during the transition from Republican to Imperial forms of government, was to have a profound and defining influence on Western European and American societies. These writings ultimately established lasting models of aesthetic refinement, philosophical aspiration, and political ambition that continue to shape modern cultures. This class will be exploring the Golden Age of Latin Literature from an historical perspective in order to provide an intensive examination of the cultural contexts in which these monumental works of classical art were first produced. Readings will emphasize the transition from a Republican form of government to an Empire under the rule of Augustus Caesar and the diversity of responses among individual authors to the profound structural changes that Roman society was undergoing at this time. Particular attention will be devoted to the reorganization of society and the self through textuality, the changing dimensions of the public and the private, the roles of class and gender, and the relationship between art and pleasure. Writings covering a wide variety of literary genres will include the works of Caesar, Cicero, Catullus, Livy, Virgil, Horace, and Ovid, with additional readings from Cassius Dio for background.

Criteria for HASS-CI Subjects

Communication Intensive Subjects in the humanities, arts, and social sciences should require at least 20 pages of writing divided among 3-5 assignments. Of these 3-5 assignments, at least one should be revised and resubmitted. HASS-CI subjects should further offer students substantial opportunity for oral expression through presentations, student-led discussion, or class participation. In order to guarantee sufficient attention to student writing and substantial opportunity for oral expression, the maximum number of students per section in a HASS-CI subject is 18, except in the case of a subject taught without sections (where the faculty member in charge is the only instructor). In that case, enrollments can rise to 25, if a writing fellow is attached to the subject.

Grading

The final grade for this class will be computed according to the following weighted scale:

ACTIVITIES PERCENTAGES
Class Participation 25%
Reader Responses (3 Papers, 2 pages each) 15%
In-class Projects 5%
Write-up of Research Project (5 pages) 15%
Draft of Final Paper (6-10 pages) 10%
Final Paper (10 pages) 30%

Class Participation

Active contribution to class discussion constitutes a significant portion of the final grade. Students are expected to be fully prepared in the assigned readings and to be ready to speak in every class.

Reader Response Papers

Three short papers (2 pages each in length, double-spaced, 12-point type, with 1-inch margins on all sides) provide opportunities for students to address their own concerns when reading the texts. These exercises should focus on a specific passage from that day's assigned reading that strikes you as particularly interesting or curious or puzzling, something startling that may have challenged your initial expectations of the text. After identifying the important features of the passage and what makes them so unusual, go on to examine the meaning and significance of these features, and then explain their implications and consequences, their purpose and function within the text.

In-class Projects

Throughout the term, in-class projects will be designed to allow you to apply the knowledge you have acquired to the materials you have been reading most recently. In addition, quizzes - some announced, some unannounced - will be given occasionally to test your comprehension of the readings. Unannounced quizzes will only be counted if the grade received is an A- or above; announced quizzes will always be counted.

Research Project

One independent research project on some aspect of Roman civic life will be required. Students will make a 10-minute oral presentation to the rest of the class on what they have discovered, and then one week later will be required to submit a formal write-up of their findings for a separate grade.

Final Paper

Students will submit a first draft of their final paper two and a half weeks before the final paper is due. The draft will be returned one week later with the instructor's comments and suggestions. The final version should then include whatever corrections, additions, or amplifications are considered necessary before submission. This work will be evaluated on the basis of consistent logical argumentation, judicious use of evidence, coherent development of ideas, and rhetorical effectiveness.

Attendance Policy

Punctual attendance is required at every class meeting. Each unexcused absence will result in a lowering of the Class Participation component of the grade by 5 points, each lateness more than 10 minutes into class by 3 points. Absences may be excused only by contacting the instructor in advance of the class to be missed and receiving confirmation of the request to be excused.

Late Paper Policy

Reader responses may receive an automatic extension for one class period upon consultation with the instructor. Further lateness will result in a reduction of 1/3 of a grade for each class the paper is overdue beyond that time. Those assignments and projects marked on the syllabus may not receive an extension.

Rewrite Policy

Any reader response may be rewritten upon satisfying the following requirements:

  1. The original paper was submitted on time.
  2. The student meets with the instructor to go over the paper.
  3. The paper is completely rewritten from scratch and not just edited.
  4. The rewritten paper is resubmitted no later than one week after the original was returned in class.

The highest grade that a rewritten response may receive is a B+. A prior draft of the final paper for the class will be submitted two and a half weeks prior to the submission of the final version. The final grade for the paper will replace the initial grade for the first draft.

Plagiarism Policy

Full acknowledgement for all information obtained from sources outside the classroom needs to be clearly stated. All ideas, arguments, and direct phrasings taken from someone else's work need to be identified and properly footnoted. Quotations from other sources should be clearly marked as distinct from the student's own work and should follow the proper citational conventions. For further guidance in determining proper forms of attribution, see the MIT Website on Plagiarism.


 
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