- Docente: Camillo Neri
- Credits: 6
- SSD: L-FIL-LET/02
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Philology, Literature and Classical Tradition (cod. 0970)
Learning outcomes
The students are expected to acquire specific skills in the
analysis and interpretation of texts selected from the whole
history of the Greek language (from the archaic age to the
formation of the so-called ‘common language' that then developed
into Modern Greek).
Through a direct analysis of textual specimens the pupils are
expected to improve: a) their ability to recognise the proper
historical setting of a Greek text or document and to reconstruct
both synchronically and diachronically its textual tradition; b)
their methodological skills to analyse a text from a historical and
linguistic point of view and to establish its relations with other
texts and cultural products.
The students will prove their meeting of these goals by producing
an essay on one text and giving a presentation of their work to the
class.
The students will come in contact with the main tools of the
‘philological practice' (reading of papyruses and manuscripts on
microfilm, consulting textual and bibliographical databases, paper
and IT tools of documentation and analysis indexes), refining thus
their skills in the textual analysis of ancient texts.
Course contents
Special focus course ('corso monografico')
a) Feasts and symposia in Greek literature: representations of sympotic and festive contexts from Homer to Christianity.
Core course ('parte istituzionale')
b) General rudiments of Grammar and History of the Greek Language
Lectures Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, 16-18, Aula Mansarda (Mon.) and Auletta Seminari (Tue. and Wed.) (5.10-11.11); Tuesday 12-14, Wednesday 11-13, Friday 15-17, Aula Mansarda (17.11-22.12).
Links: http://www.classics.unibo.it
Readings/Bibliography
a) Notes from the lectures. Two essays in the following
list: B. Gentili, Poesia e pubblico nella Grecia antica,
Milano, Feltrinelli, 2006 (4th ed.); M. Vetta (ed.), Poesia e
simposio nella Grecia antica, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 1995 (2nd
ed.); O. Murray (ed.), Sympotica : a Symposium on the
Symposion, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1990; K. Fabian-E.
Pellizer-G. Tedeschi, Oinera Teuche. Studi triestini di poesia
conviviale, Alessandria, Edizioni dell'Orso, 1991; C. Calame,
Le choeurs de jeunes filles en Grèce ancienne, Roma,
Edizioni dell'Ateneo, 1977; C. Calame, Rito e poesia corale in
Grecia, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 1977; M.L. West, Studies in
Greek Elegy and Iambus, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1974. Further
bibliography on the discussed texts will be provided during the
lectures.
b) Notes from the lectures. One essay in the
following list: O. Hoffmann-A. Debrunner-A. Scherer, Storia
della lingua greca, trad. it. Napoli, Macchiaroli, 1969; A.
Meillet, Lineamenti di storia della lingua greca, trad.
it. Torino, Einaudi, 1981 (2nd ed.); L.R. Palmer, Greek
Language, London, Faber, 1980; V. Pisani, Storia della
lingua greca, Torino, Sei, 1960; L. Heilmann, Grammatica
storica della lingua greca, Torino, Sei, 1963; O. Szemerényi,
Introduzione alla linguistica indoeuropea, a c. di G.
Boccali-V. Brugnatelli-M. Negri, Milano, Unicopli, 1985, F. Villar,
Gli indoeuropei e le origini dell'Europa, trad. it.
Bologna, il Mulino, 1997; W.P. Lehmann, La linguistica
indoeuropea. Storia, problemi e metodi, trad. it. Bologna, il
Mulino, 1999.
Teaching methods
After some introductory lectures by the teacher and the specimen
analysis of selected texts, the lectures will be carried out by the
students themselves as presentations (which will test thus the
abilities they have developed through the course); the sessions
will have a seminar-like form and meant to be moments of real
common research, with the familiarisation and the use of the main
philological tools (traditional and data processing).
All the material handed out in the lectures will be available
afterwards on line at
http://www2.classics.unibo.it/Organico/PDocenti/homeneri.htm
Assessment methods
A first assessment will be carried out to begin with in the
individual presentations and in the seminars, where the students
will be able auto-assess their learning.
The viva voce examination consists of a conversation in which the
teachers, through a series of questions, will test the theoretical
knowledge and the theoretical-practical methodologies as explained
in the lectures.
The students who will not have given a presentation to the class
will be required to carry out a linguistic analysis of some texts
in the viva voce.
Teaching tools
PC, video projector, overhead projector, photocopied
hand-outs
Links to further information
Office hours
See the website of Camillo Neri