99049 - Philology and Greek Literature (1) (LM)

Academic Year 2022/2023

  • Docente: Camillo Neri
  • Credits: 6
  • SSD: L-FIL-LET/02
  • Language: Italian

Learning outcomes

After completing the course, students have a thorough knowledge of Greek literature from its origins to the late antique period. They possess a philological method for the critical reading of classical texts and for the historical knowledge of the ways and forms of their transmission. They can identify the elements of Greek culture which are indispensable for the study of any modern European literature. They are able to update and deepen their knowledge and elaborate autonomous perspectives of analysis, based on the most recent scientific debate and on the collection of the relevant bibliography.

Course contents

A Core course (30 hours).

1. Scholarship and history of Greek scholarship: history of textual tradition, textual criticism, editorial technique, examples (Euripides, Alcestis: prologue) (10 hours).

2. Greek language and history of the Greek language: historical grammar, from IE to Greek dialects, examples (Sappho, fragments) (10 hours).

3. Greek literature and history of Greek literature: from oral performances, to theater, to prose, to 'literature', to the opening to the Jewish and Roman world, to the late-ancient and Byzantine age, examples (Greek lyric, Ps.-Xenophon, Constitution of the Athenians, Herondas, Mimiamb 6) (10 hours).

B. Special focus course (30 hours).

Heraclitus' Homeric Problems.

C. Critical investigations (personal).

Alongside the teaching, a short modern Greek course-laboratory can be activated, held by a native speaker, which students can optionally follow.

Readings/Bibliography

A.1. Notes from the lectures. As for the reading of Euripides' Alcestis (verses discussed during the lectures only): J. Diggle, Euripidis fabulae, I, Oxford 19914, pp. 37-83 (for the commentary: Laetitia P.E. Parker, Euripides. Alcestis, Oxford 20071, 20172); see also A. Garzya, Euripides. Alcestis, Leipzig 19801, 20112; D. Susanetti, Euripide. Alcesti, Venezia 2001; C. Diano, Euripide. Alcesti, Vicenza 1968. One book in the following list: P. Maas, La critica del testo, trad. it. Roma 2017(4) (19511; ed. or. Leipzig 19271, 19502, 19573); G. Pasquali, Storia della tradizione e critica del testo, Firenze 19522 (19341); R. Pfeiffer, Storia della filologia classica, I. Dalle origini alla fine dell'età ellenistica, trad. it. Napoli 1973 (ed. or. Oxford 1968); L.D. Reynolds-N.G. Wilson, Copisti e filologi. La tradizione dei classici dall'antichità ai tempi moderni, Roma-Padova 20164 (Padova 19691; ed. or. Oxford 1968); S. Timpanaro, La genesi del metodo del Lachmann, Torino-Novara 2010 (Firenze 19631, Padova 19812); M.L. West, Critica del testo e tecnica dell’edizione, Palermo 1991 (ed. or. Stuttgart 1973).

A.2. Notes from the lectures. Ad for the reading of Sappho (verses discussed during the lectures only): C. Neri, Saffo. Testimonianze e frammenti, Berlin-Boston 2021. One book in the following list: L. Heilmann, Grammatica storica della lingua greca, Torino 1963; P. Chantraine, Morphologie historique du grec, Paris 1947; C. Neri (et all.), Μέθοδος. Corso di lingua e cultura greca. Grammatica, Firenze 2018.

A.3. Notes from the lectures. As for the reading of Greek lyric (Archilochus, Hipponax, Semonides, Mimnermus, Solon, Alcaeus, Pindarus, Bacchlylides only): C. Neri, Lirici greci. Età arcaica e classica, Roma 2011; E. Degani-G. Burzacchini, Lirici greci, Bologna 20052. As for Ps.-Xenophon, Constitution of the Athenians (passages discussed during the lectures only): G. Serra, Pseudo-Senofonte. Costituzione degli Ateniesi, con un saggio di L. Canfora Milano 2018. As for Herondas, Mimiamb 6 (verses discussed during the lectures only): L. Di Gregorio, Eronda. Mimiambi, II, Milano 2004, pp. 8-17, 128-210; I.C. Cunningham, Herodas. Mimiambi, Monachii-Lipsiae 20042 (19871), pp. 20-24; Valentina Barbieri, Eroda. Mimiambi, pref. di M. Napolitano, Milano 2016, pp. 115-129. A history of Greek literature of your choice (recommended: Antonietta Porro-W. Lapini, Letteratura greca, Bologna 2017).

B. Notes from the lectures. As for Heraclitus' text: F. Oelmann et Societatis Philologae Bonnensis Sodales, Heracliti Quaestiones Homericae, Lipsiae 1910; F. Buffière, Allégories d’Homère, Paris 1962; as for translation and commentary: D.A. Russell-D. Konstan, Heraclitus. Homeric Problems Atlanta 2005; F. Pontani, Eraclito. Questioni omeriche: sulle allegorie di Omero in merito agli dèi, Pisa 2005; Ilaria Ramelli, Allegoristi dell’età classica. Opere e frammenti, intr. di R. Radice; in appendice Il papiro di Derveni con testo greco a fronte, Milano 2007, pp. 561-670.

C. Students are required to arrange with the teachers their own field of interest where to direct the reading (in translation) of some work of crucial importance in the Greek Literature as well as of some monographies (ex. if a student decides to examine the women-role in ancient Greece he will be required to read in translation the Euripides' Medea, Aristophanes' Thesmoforiazousai, Theocritus' XV Idyll, a selection of erotic epigrams and the reading ed. by G. Arrigoni). Basic notions of metrics, grammar and literary history are also required.

Students who attend the course for only 6 CFU are required to bring only points A.1-3 of the program.

Students who do not attend the lessons are required to bring the same program as regards the institutional part and to define a personalized program, also in the light of their own interests, for the monographic part.

Teaching methods

The lectures on the core course will mostly have a frontal character, and the main concepts will be illustrated by examples taken from the texts in the program. The lectures on the special focus course will instead be carried out mostly as a seminar: the textual analysis and the discussion will be collective. Photocopies of the most important texts will be given out and students will be required to do their own researches in the Library of the Department.

All the material handed out in the lectures will be available afterwards on line at http://www2.classics.unibo.it/Didattica/Programs/20222023/FLG2023/

Assessment methods

At the end of the course an oral examination will take place. The students are expected to expose their critical investigation and to show their skills in translating the core course's texts and in translating and commenting the special focus texts. The active participation of the students in the course is strongly recommended.

The maximum grade (30L) requires accurate and complete answers to all questions posed during the oral examination. The exam will be deemed to have been passed (with variable evaluation depending on the quality of the answers) if the candidate has answered in a precise and complete manner to most questions. As for the theoretical knowledge and the translation and exegesis of the texts, the metric is the following: outstanding: 30L; excellent: 28-30; good: 25-27; discrete: 22-24; sufficient: 18-21.

For deeply-rooted didactic conviction, I do not propose links to syllabi of questions, which would inevitably end up impoverishing the general preparation of the students. Since exams take place every fifteen days, students who want to experience the actual performance of an exam can attend - as spectators - the exam sessions, which are public.


Teaching tools

PC, video projector, overhead projector, photocopied handouts.

Links to further information

http://www2.classics.unibo.it/Didattica/Programs/20222023/FLG2023/

Office hours

See the website of Camillo Neri

SDGs

Quality education Gender equality Reduced inequalities Peace, justice and strong institutions

This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.