Courses Designed to
Meet General Education Requirements
World Cultural Studies
St. Lawrence University
The Cultural Encounters Program
Rationale for Cultural Encounters Level
II
Anne Mamary
Greek Poetry, Philosophy, and
Politics in a Multicultural Context
1. This course will examine ancient
Greek poetry, philosophy, and politics
and how these texts developed in a multicultural
(African, Greek, and Semitic) context
in the Mediterranean Basin. The class
will also consider contemporary (19th
and 20th century) discourse(s) about
these works and cultures from four interconnected
angles:
- The class will read contemporary
scholarship on the Afroasiatic roots
of Greek philosophy and culture.
- Looking at a variety of Greek texts,
the class will search for clues about
how the Greeks regarded their African
and Semitic neighbors.
- The class will consider some African
and Semitic texts which may have influenced
the Greeks and which are also interesting
in their own right.
- The class will attend to the multiplicity
within each culture to illustrate
that "cultures" are not
monolithic and that there are perhaps
cultural encounters (based in hierarchies
of gender, sexuality, class and ethnicity,
for example) at work within a larger
cultural context.
Texts
- Aeschylus, Oresteia
- Aristotle, Politics
- Bernal, Martin, Black Athena,
Vol. I
"The Challenge of Black Athena."
Arethusa, special issue, Fall 1989.
- Cantarella, Eva, Bisexuality
in the Ancient World
- DuBois, Page, Centaurs and
Amazons
- Frye, Ellen, The Other Sappho
- Haley, Shelley, Black Feminist
Thought and the Classics
- Herodotus, Histories
- Homeric Hymn to Demeter
- Lamy, Lucy, New Light On
Ancient Knowledge: Egyptian Mysteries
- Lichtheim, Miriam, Ancient
Egyptian Autobiographies
- Plato, Dialogues
- Sappho, Fragments
- Sertima, Ivan van, Black
Women in Antiquity
- Versluis, Arthur, The Egyptian
Mysteries
2. The course will be writing intensive
in that it incorporates a variety of
writing styles, utilizes writing to
spark class discussion and involves
revision based on student and instructor
comment. The writing for the course
will reflect the questions the course
raises--in both form and content. As
the course studies an interdisciplinary
and varied body of texts, students too
will be given writing assignments in
multiple styles. A brief writing assignment
(2 pages) will be assigned every week
and will be used to generate student
discussion in class. Some of the assignments
will be creative ones, asking students,
through poetry, fiction and creative
non-fiction, to put into practice alternative
ways of knowing. One of the brief writing
assignments will be revised into a more
polished piece of writing (5-7 pages)
to be turned in at the end of the semester.
This revised writing will have been
reviewed and critiqued by the student's
peers in class discussion and by the
instructor in writing. The exams for
the course will also be in essay form.
3. The contemporary scholarship on
the Afroasiatic roots of Greek philosophy
represents a cultural encounter in that
it throws into relief how a scholar's
cultural assumptions shape how that
scholar represents and understands cultures
removed in both time and space from
that scholar's own world. In addition,
the class will explore how the Greeks
regarded their neighbors and some of
the influences those neighbors may have
had on Greek thought.
4. It is hoped that students will reconsider,
through contemporary representations
of ancient Greece, their own perceptions
of the position of Greece and its neighbors
as the beginnings of European culture
and thought.
5. One of the strongest ways the course
will address issues of power, domination
and resistance is through a repositioning
of the Greek texts into a larger cultural/political
context than is ordinary in courses
on ancient Greek thought.
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