- 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
Archaeology and Cultures of the Ancient World (cod. 8855)
Also valid for 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) ἄτη, δαίμων and μανία: genius and folly in Greek literature from
Homer to Christianity.
Core course ('parte istituzionale')
b) General rudiments of History of the Greek Language
Lectures Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 16-18, Mansarda Room
(2.10.2017-8.11.2017).
Start date: 2.10.2017 (1st semester).
Office Hours: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 9-13 (at Dept.).
Links: http://www.unibo.it/docenti/camillo.neri
http://www2.classics.unibo.it/Didattica/Programs/20172018/Neri/
Readings/Bibliography
a) Notes from the lectures. Two books (or one book and three
essays in review) in the following list:
Valeria Andò-N. Cusumano (edd.), Come bestie? Forme e paradossi della violenza tra mondo antico e disagio contemporaneo, Caltanissetta 2010; P.R. Bosman (ed.), Mania. Madness in the Greco-Roman World, Pretoria 2009; P. Brown, The Ransom of the Soul: Afterlife and Wealth in Early Western Christianity, Cambridge, Mass. 2015; G. Burzacchini, Osservazioni su alcuni luoghi dell'Eracle di Euripide, in P. Arduini (ed.), Studi offerti ad Alessandro Perutelli, Roma 2008, 143-158; Gillian Clark, Body and Gender, Soul and Reason in Late Antiquity, Burlington, VT 2011; D.B. Claus, Toward the Soul: An Inquiry into the Meaning of ψυχή before Plato, New Haven 1981; M. Davis, The Soul of the Greeks: an Inquiry, Chicago-London 2011; M. Detienne, De la pensée religieuse à la pensée philosophique. La notion de Daïmôn dans le pythagorisme ancien, Paris 1963; E.R. Dodds, I Greci e l’irrazionale, trad. it. Milano 20033; B. Effe-R. Glei, (edd.), Genie und Wahnsinn. Konzepte psychischer "Normalität" und "Abnormalität" im Altertum, Trier 2000; M. Foucault, La cura di sé, trad. it. Milano 20016; H. Fränkel, Poesia e filosofia nella Grecia arcaica, trad. it. Bologna 1997; Dorian G. Greenbaum, The Daimon in Hellenistic Astrology. Origins and Influence, Leiden-Boston 2016; G. Guidorizzi, Ai confini dell'anima: i Greci e la follia, Milano 2010; Debra Hershkowitz, The Madness of Epic. Reading Insanity from Homer to Statius, Oxford 1998; A.A. Long, Greek Models of Mind and Self, Cambridge, Mass.-London 2015; A. Marneros, Irrsal! Wirrsal! Wahnsinn! Persönlichkeit, Psychose und psychische Konflikte in Tragödien und Mythen, Stuttgart 2013; J. Mattes, Der Wahnsinn im griechischen Mythos und in der Dichtung bis zum Drama des fünften Jahrhunderts, Diss. Mainz 1970; H. Nowak, Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Begriffes Daimon. Eine Untersuchung epigraphischer Zeugnisse vom 5. Jh. v. Chr. bis zum 5. Jh. n. Chr., Diss. Bonn 1959; R.B. Onians, Le origini del pensiero europeo, trad. it. Milano 20022; Ruth Padel, Whom Gods destroy. Elements of Greek and Tragic Madness, Princeton 1995; E. Pellizer, La nozione di dàimon nella Grecia arcaica (fine a Platone escluso), in E. Calderón Dorda (ed.), Eusébeia. Estudios de religión griega, Madrid 2011, 255-272; Hélène Perdicoyianni-Paléologou (ed.), The Concept of Madness from Homer to Byzantium. Manifestations and Aspects of Mental Illness and Disorder, Amsterdam 2016; J. Pigeaud, La maladie de l’âme, Paris 1981; J. Pigeaud, Folie et cures de la folie chez les médecins de l'antiquité gréco-romaine: la manie, Paris 1987; G. Reale, Corpo, anima e salute. Il concetto di uomo da Omero a Platone, Milano 1999; E. Rohde, Psiche. Culto delle anime e fede nell’immortalità, trad. it. Bari 19702; F. Ruggiero, La follia dei cristiani. La reazione pagana al cristianesimo nei secoli 1.-5., Roma 20022; B. Simon, Mind and Madness in Ancient Greece. The Classical Roots of Modern Psychiatry, Ithaca 1980; B. Snell, La cultura greca e le origini del pensiero europeo, trad. it. Torino 1963; A. Timotin, La démonologie platonicienne. Histoire de la notion de "daimon" de Platon aux derniers néoplatoniciens, Leiden (et all.) 2012; M. Vegetti, Anima e corpo, in M. V. (ed.), Il sapere degli antichi, Torino 1985, 201ss.; J.-P. Vernant, Mito e pensiero presso i Greci, trad. it. Torino 19782. 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 (2a 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.
Students who do not attend the lessons are invited to contact the teacher to define an additional customized program.
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/Didattica/Programs/20172018/Neri/
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
teacher, 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.
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.
For deeply-rooted didactic conviction, I do not propose links to syllabi 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://www.unibo.it/docenti/camillo.neri
Office hours
See the website of Camillo Neri