main contentMajoring and Minoring
For complete information about majoring, see the online catalog.
Art
208 Ancient Greek and Roman Art
325 Ovid and the Visual Arts
Classics
100 Ancient Greek Myth: Gods and Goddesses, Heroines and Heroes
201 Introduction to Ancient Greek Thought and Culture
202 Introduction to Ancient Roman Thought and Culture
251 History of Byzantium
252 Art and Archaeology of the Aegean
253 Attic Tragedy
255 Sports, Games, and Spectacles in the Greco-Roman World
266 Health and Healing in the Ancient World
314 Topography and Monuments of Athens
320 Greek and Roman Epic
324 Roman Women
450 Topics in Classical Studies
499 Independent Study
English
309 Ancient Masterpieces and English Literature
Greek
101 Classical Greek I
102 Classical Greek II
201 Readings in Hellenistic and Classical Greek
202 Advanced Readings in Classical Greek
301 Advanced Greek: Tragedy and Epic
302 Advanced Greek: Poetry
History
216 Ancient Greece
219 Ancient Rome: From Republic to Empire
Latin
101 Beginning Latin I
102 Beginning Latin II
201 Intermediate Latin I
202 Advanced Readings in Latin
Philosophy
301 Ancient Western Philosophy
451 Philosophical Studies: History of Philosophy
453 Philosophical Studies: Advanced Themes in Philosophy
Political Science
310 Pillars of Western Political Thought: Plato to Machiavelli
Religious Studies
224 Jewish Origins
225 Christian Origins
335 Gender, Sex, Jews, and Christians: Ancient World
350 Social and Religious World of Early Judaism and Christianity
450 Seminar: Social and Religious World of Early Judaism and Christianity
The Classics Program
The Classics major and minor is inherently interdisciplinary. The courses required for the major and minor include classics courses and an appropriate balance of disciplinary perspective within the major and courses in a minimum of three of the traditional academic disciplines, including Greek or Latin language through 202. A student may choose specific courses of interest within Greco-Roman studies, but the major grows from a foundation courses (either CLAS 201 Greek Thought and Culture or CLAS 202 Roman Thought and Culture) and culminates in CLAS 450 Topics in Classical Studies. For Latin and Greek course listings, see World Languages and Literatures.
Also see the L&C Catalog:
Classics Program and Requirements
Classics is located in room 2nd Floor of J.R. Howard Hall on the Undergraduate Campus.
MSC: 45
email clas@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-7450
Department Chair Gordon Kelly
Classics
Lewis & Clark
615 S. Palatine Hill Road
Portland OR 97219