CLASSIC 152A
Ancient City: Greek World
Description: Lecture, three hours. Enforced requisite: course 10 or 51A or Art History 20 or History 1A. Range of interdisciplinary approaches to study of Athens and/or cities of Greek world, including Asia Minor, south Italy, and Sicily. Approaches, themes, and periods (both ancient city and receptions of city from classical antiquity to modern era) vary depending on individual instructor and topic. May be repeated for credit with topic change. P/NP or letter grading.
Units: 4.0
Units: 4.0
Most Helpful Review
Spring 2021 - This professor clearly has such a depth of knowledge in every topic she discusses, which is makes for really interesting lectures that bring in a lot of different topics both related to and seemingly not related to classics. That said, because of her years of experience, her lectures aren't the most organized in the world, though she does post slides after the lecture, which are helpful. I think she's really lenient, grading wise. Your grade is two 6-7 page essays (one on material culture, the other politics related, you choose the prompt most interesting to you as long as you do one of each) a take-home final, and an attendance and participation points boost. I'm pretty sure she doesn't give out anything lower than an A- on principle, because my first essay was pretty crap (and she told me haha) and she still gave me a 90%. That said, do actually try on the essays, because the more you get into them, the more rewarding they are. Also, I'd encourage you to participate in class, because it was really easy not to over zoom and I felt bad for just sitting in silence and having her try to fill the void. Good class, interesting professor. Don't freak out about all the readings in the ccle, most of them are optional.
Spring 2021 - This professor clearly has such a depth of knowledge in every topic she discusses, which is makes for really interesting lectures that bring in a lot of different topics both related to and seemingly not related to classics. That said, because of her years of experience, her lectures aren't the most organized in the world, though she does post slides after the lecture, which are helpful. I think she's really lenient, grading wise. Your grade is two 6-7 page essays (one on material culture, the other politics related, you choose the prompt most interesting to you as long as you do one of each) a take-home final, and an attendance and participation points boost. I'm pretty sure she doesn't give out anything lower than an A- on principle, because my first essay was pretty crap (and she told me haha) and she still gave me a 90%. That said, do actually try on the essays, because the more you get into them, the more rewarding they are. Also, I'd encourage you to participate in class, because it was really easy not to over zoom and I felt bad for just sitting in silence and having her try to fill the void. Good class, interesting professor. Don't freak out about all the readings in the ccle, most of them are optional.