Explores Greek and Roman conceptions of gender and sexuality in the most popular and least prestigious of ancient literary forms, prose fiction. Central to most of these novels is an erotic relationship tested by a series of remarkable adventures which in most cases ends in the triumph of love and marriage. Particular attention will be paid to Achilles Tatius,
Leucippe and Clitophon; Heliodorus,
An Ethiopian Story; Longus,
Daphnis and Chloe; Petronius,
Satyricon and Apuleius'
Golden Ass
WEIGHT: 12.5%
ASSESSMENT:
HTC229: 3,000 words of written work (60%);2-hr exam (40%).
HTC329: 3,500 words of written work (60%);2-hr exam (40%).
TEACHING PATTERN: 2 x 1-hr lectures weekly, 8 tutorials
REQUISITE INFO
Prereq
25% at level 100 in Ancient Civilisations or HEA or HAF
Units are offered in attending mode unless otherwise indicated (that is attendance is required at the campus identified). A unit identified as offered by distance, that is there is no requirement for attendance, is identified with a nominal enrolment campus. A unit offered to both attending students and by distance from the same campus is identified as having both modes of study.
Campus - H Hobart, L Launceston, W Burnie. Study Centre - V Sydney, R Rozelle, P Beauty Point. Distance units may also have a campus identifier of I Isolated, N Interstate, O Overseas. Units delivered in Transnational Education (TNE) Programs have a campus identifier of A Hangzhou, F Fuzhou, G Shanghai, K KDU Malaysia, Q Kuwait or Y Hong Kong.
Special approval is required for enrolment into TNE Program units - campuses A, F, G, K, Q and Y click here for more information.