Classics 205 - Cleopatra

Fall
2014
01
4.00
Bruce Arnold
TTH 01:15PM-02:30PM
Mount Holyoke College
89426
Clapp Laboratory 127
barnold@mtholyoke.edu
In this course Cleopatra will be considered both as a political figure of importance in her own right and also as an enemy queen, representing a presumptuous challenge to the political hegemony and cultural values of the Romans. She may serve, therefore, as a lens through which one may view social and political tensions within Roman society over the nature of authority and empire. Readings include Vergil, Horace, Propertius, Lucan, Caesar, Sallust, Plutarch and the plays of Shakespeare and Shaw, where she is ambivalently portrayed as a woman who desires power or, contrariwise, as a romantic idealist who scorns temporal powers in fulfillment of private desires.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.