Independent Articles CIC Home Contact Us Summer 2008  
 
 

The Homeric Hymns and poetry of Hesiod—ancient texts that are less well known than the Iliad and Odyssey but equally important to the Western poetic tradition—were the focus of CIC’s third annual seminar on Ancient Greece in the Modern College Classroom.

On July 14–18, 22 faculty members from CIC member institutions (see below) discussed the Hymns and Hesiod’s two major poems, the Theogony and Works and Days, within the context of the ancient cultural landscape. The seminar was specifically designed to give nonspecialist faculty members from all disciplines the opportunity to extend their knowledge of ancient sources and develop strategies for incorporating them into their courses, especially general education courses.

Cosponsored by CIC and the Center for Hellenic Studies and made possible through the generous support of the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, the seminar took place at the Center’s Washington, DC, campus. It was directed by the Center’s director, Gregory Nagy, who is also Francis Jones Professor of Classical Greek Literature and professor of comparative literature at Harvard University, and Kenneth Scott Morrell, associate professor of Greek and Roman studies at Rhodes College (TN).

Participants worked collaboratively on materials and had full access to the Center’s renowned library. Because past participants have greatly benefited from sharing their syllabi, handouts, bibliographies, and lecture notes, participants this summer were encouraged to post their own class materials electronically on a collaborative Sakai website designed for the seminar. “Throughout the course of the seminar these documents served as important guides as participants considered the nature of assignments and ways of integrating the study of Hesiod and the Homeric Hymns into courses,” Professor Morrell explained.

Because of the overwhelming number of exceptional nominations that CIC received for participation in the 2008 seminar, CIC and the Center for Hellenic Studies will repeat the seminar on Homer and Hesiod in 2009. Twenty-three faculty members who were nominated for the 2008 seminar but who could not be accommodated this year have already been offered places in next year’s session. Also a group of 12 faculty members who attended a previous Ancient Greece seminar participated in the 2008 session through remote video and online access in order to expand on and deepen their earlier experiences.



   

Scott Amos
Assistant Professor of History
Lynchburg College (VA)

Cynthia Bandish
Associate Professor of English
Bluffton College (OH)

Patricia Bart
Assistant Professor of English
Hillsdale College (MI)

Robin Luana Bott
Associate Professor of English
Adrian College (MI)

Kevin DeLapp
Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy
Converse College (SC)

Donna Edsall
Professor of English
Muskingum College (OH)

Mark Gammon
Assistant Professor of Religion
Simpson College (IA)

Matthew Gordley
Assistant Professor
of Religious Studies
Regent University (VA)

Jessica Gosnell
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
St. Ambrose University (IA)

Karen Gover
Professor of Philosophy
Bennington College (VT)

James Hartley
Professor of Economics
Mount Holyoke College (MA)

Patrick Hotle
Associate Professor of History
Culver-Stockton College (MO)

Wendy Larson-Harris
Associate Professor of English
Roanoke College (VA)

Anne MacMaster
Associate Professor of English
Millsaps College (MS)

Eric Mason
Associate Professor
of Biblical Studies
Judson University (IL)

Christine McCann
Associate Professor
of History and Political Science
Norwich University (VT)

Jenny Mueller
Assistant Professor of English
McKendree University (IL)

Peter Okun
Associate Professor of English
Davis & Elkins College (WV)

 

Suzanne Prestien
Assistant Professor of English
and Public Relations
Westminster College (PA)

Scott Ward
Professor of Creative Writing and Literature
Eckerd College (FL)

Mark Wells
Associate Professor of Biblical
and Religious Studies
Montreat College (NC)

Ed Wingenbach
Associate Professor of Government
University of Redlands (CA)

ONLINE PARTICIPANTS

Donna Allego
Associate Professor of Language, Literature, and Fine Arts
Gwynedd-Mercy College (PA)

Timothy Bratton
Professor of History
Jamestown College (ND)

Carol Breslin
Professor of Language, Literature, and Fine Arts
Gwynedd-Mercy College (PA)

Sally Fischer
Professor of Philosophy
Warren Wilson College (NC)

Carl Gombert
Professor of Art
Maryville College (TN)

Pamela Gurney
Assistant Professor of Language and Letters
Walsh University (OH)

Timothy Kircher
Professor of History
Guilford College (NC)

Diane Mockridge
Professor of History
Ripon College (WI)

Taimi Olsen
Associate Professor of English
Tusculum College (TN)

Lillian Roland
Professor of English
Lindsey Wilson College (KY)

Gregory Vaggiano
Assistant Professor of History
Sacred Heart University (CT)

Barbara Witucki
Assistant Professor of English
Utica College (NY)


 

Twenty-two CIC faculty members explored the Homeric Hymns and poetry of Hesiod during the Ancient Greece in the Modern College Classroom seminar on July 14–18 in Washington, DC. See below.

 
Making the Case Website
Conferences and Events
Projects and Services
CIC Listservs
News Releases
Membership
Independent Past Issues
View past issues of the Independent
in both online and PDF format.
Want a printed version of the Independent?
Email us at cic@cic.nche.edu.
 
Independent
The Council of Independent Colleges
One Dupont Circle NW, Suite 320 • Washington, DC 20036

Tel: (202) 466-7230 • Fax: (202) 466-7238
Email:
cic@cic.nche.edu www.cic.edu
View PDF of this issue of the Independent.
To view, you must have Adobe Reader, which is available for free from the Adobe website.

Copyright © 2008 Council of Independent Colleges