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Andrew Wolpert
Associate Professor of Classics
Office: 125B Dauer Hall
Tel: 352-392-2075 ext. 266
Fax: 352-846-0297
wolpert@ufl.edu
Mailing Address
125 Dauer Hall
Department of Classics
University of Florida
Post Office Box 117435
Gainesville, FL 32611-7435
Fall Office Hours
Thursday: 11:00-1:00 PM
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DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAM
CLA 6930
THE ATHENIAN DEMOCRACY
Fall 2008
Distance Students Only*
*CLA 6930 is only for distance students,
traditional students should click here
Announcements
Be sure to check regularly the course e-Learning page for any
announcements.
Course Description
An examination of the political, social, and cultural
institutions of the Athenian democracy, with particular attention to
recent scholarly methods, approaches, and theories. Topics
include the origin and development of the Athenian democracy; political
organizations and social structures; democracy and economic production;
gender, sexuality, and citizenship; democratic discourse and
ideology; and democracy and the arts.
Registration
Non-Florida residents register through DoCE.
Florida
residents need to fill out the following course approval form (pdf)
and email it to Dr. Wolpert (wolpert@ufl.edu)
so that they can be provided a section number.
Required Texts (available at online bookstores)
- Cohen, D. 1995. Law,
Violence and Community in Classical Athens. Cambridge.
- Davidson, James,
Courtesans and
Fishcakes: The Consuming Passions of Classical Athens (New
York: HarperPerennial, 1999).
- Hansen, Mogens H., The
Athenian
Democracy in the
Age of Demosthenes: Structures, Principles, and Ideology
(Norman: University
of Oklahoma
Press, 1999).
- Hurwit, Jeffrey, The
Acropolis in the Age of Pericles (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2004).
- Ober,
Josiah, Mass and Elite in
Democratic Athens: Rhetoric, Ideology, and the Power of the People
(Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1990). [For instructions on how to access this ebook,
see reading assignment for Sept. 16.]
- Raaflaub, Kurt, Josiah Ober, and Robert Wallace, Origins of Democracy in Ancient Greece
(Berkeley: University of California, 2007). Note: You may need to
purchase the hardcover edition (ISBN: 978-0520245624) since the
paperback edition is not yet widely available.
Additional Readings
- Articles are available on Ares (the "Course Reserves"
weblink from Smathers Libraries).
Web
links to library resources are accessible off-campus only if you use
the UF VPN or Library Proxy. For more information on
how to connect to the libary from off-campus, click here.
- BIBLIOGRAPHY (useful to
consult
as you begin research for your term paper). This list is not
exhaustive nor is it expected that you will be able to read all items
during the course of the semester; rather it is intended to show you
the
main questions and topics on the Athenian democracy that are currently
under investigation and provide you a starting point for your own
research.
Course Requirements
- Two Mid-Term Examinations (30% each): October 7 and
November 18
- Participation in online discussions (15%)
- Term Paper, 10-15 pages, double spaced, one-inch margins
(25%)
- First Draft Due November 25
- Second Draft Due December 2
- Final Draft Due December 9 (by 11:59 PM Eastern Time)
- There will be a 5% deduction in the letter grade for
every half hour that elapses after the deadline for the final draft.
Weekly Discussions
Meeting Time
Class meeting time is scheduled for Tuesday, 8:00-10:00 p.m.
(Eastern Time). The first class meeting will be Tuesday, Aug. 26;
the time/day may change, if necesssary to accommodate student schedules.
Preparation and Participation
Please read the assigned material before the class
meets. The first meeting will be Tuesday, Aug. 26, 8:00
EST. Participation in the weekly discussion is mandatory and
graded; however, students
may post comments and questions at any time
in the week after the 'class' and before the next 'class'.
Live participation in the weekly
'class', when I will be logged on and supervising the discussion, is
highly recommended but not required.
Location of Weekly Discussions
To participate in weekly discussions, you will need to access
the course's webpage on e-Learning.
For information on accessing e-Learning, click here.
Conduct
Please note that any message posted in discussions can be read
by anyone in the course. At all times, you are expected to write
in a polite and respectful manner.
Assignments
Students are expected to complete all requirements on the
specified dates and will not be granted an alternate date unless they
have an acceptable reason for their absence as specified in the
undergraduate catalog, fulfill the
conditions described therein, and provide timely notification.
See Graduate
Catalog.
Grading Scale
A = 90-100%
B+= 87-89.9%
B = 80-86.9%
C+ = 77-79.9%
C = 70-76.9%
D+ = 67-69.9%
D = 60-66.9%
E < 60%
Schedule
August 26: Introduction
September 2: History of Athens
September 9: Origins of the Athenian Democracy
- Raaflaub, Ober, and Wallace
September 16: Athenian Political Instiutions
- Hansen, chapters 6–12
- Hansen, "The Political Powers of the People's Court in
Fourth-Century
Athens," in O Murray and S. Price, eds., The Greek City from Homer to Alexander
(Oxford 1990) 215–43 (available on Ares)
- Ober, 141–48, 299–304 (available on Ares)
Note: This ebook is available online in two forms, through a)
NetLibrary (but only one person can check it out NetLibrary items at a
time) and b) the
History eBook Project series (which allows multiple patrons to read it
simultaneously). If the book is unavailable through NetLibrary try the
History ebook Project version.
September 23: Mass and Elite
- Ober 1, 3-7 (available on Ares)
September 30: Law and Violence
October 7: First Mid-Term Examination
- Writing Guidelines (availble on Ares)
- Essay Questions (click
here) or go to this link
- Mid-Term is due at 8:00 PM on October 7, 2008. Please
email it to me at wolpert@ufl.edu
- There will not be a discussion for the evening of October
7. There will, however, be a discussion thread open from Oct
1-Oct.6 for you to post any questions on the format of the take-home
exam.
October 14: Slavery
- Finley, M.I., "Was Greek Civilization Based on Slave
Labour?" Historia 8 (1959)
145–64 (available on Ares)
- Osborne, R., "The Economics and Politics of Slavery at
Athens," in A. Powell, ed., The
Greek World (London 1995) 27-43 (available on Ares)
- Jameson,
M.H., "Agriculture and Slaves in Classical Athens," Classical Journal 73 (1977/78)
122–45 (available on Ares)
- Wood, E.M.,
"Agricultural Slavery in Classical Athens," American Journal of Ancient History
8 (1983) 1–47 (available on Ares)
- Gagarin,
M., "The Torture of Slaves in Athenian Law," Classical Philology 91 (1996) 1–18
(available on Ares)
October 21: Women
- Cohen,
D., "Seclusion, Separation, and the Status of Women in Classical
Athens," G&R 36 (1989)
3–15 (available on Ares)
- Hunter, V., 1989. "Women's Authority in Classical Athens:
The Example of Kleoboule and Her Son (Dem. 27-29)," Echos du monde classique/Classical Views 8
(1989) 39–48 (available on Ares)
- Hunter, V., "Gossip and the Politics of Reputation in
Classical Athens," Phoenix 44
(1990) 299–325 (available on Ares)
- Foxhall, L., "Women's Ritual and Men's Work in Ancient
Athens," in
R. Hawley and B. Levick, eds., Women
in Antiquity: New Assessments (London 1995) 97–110 (available on
Ares)
- Johnstone, S., "Cracking the Code of Silence: Athenian
Legal Oratory
and
the Histories of Slaves and Women, in S. Joshel and S. Murnaghan,
eds., Women and Slaves in Greco-Roman
Culture (London 1998) 221–35 (available on Ares)
- Wolpert,
A., "Lysias 1 and the Politics of the Oikos," CJ 96 (2001) 416–24 (available on Ares)
October 28: Food, Sex, and Drinking
- Davidson, Courtesans and
Fishcakes
November 4: Democractic Architecture
- Hurwit, The Acropolis
in the Age of Pericles
November 11: Veterans Day
November 18: Second Mid-Term Examination
November 25: First Draft Due
December 2: Second Draft Due
December 9: Final Draft Due
Links to online articles and books are
accessible off-campus
only by using the UF
VPN or Library Proxy
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