Gorgon's head
Gorgon's head on a silver coin of Naples
permission to use image granted
F11: CLA227, Greek Civilization:
Topics for Paper 6
due Monday, Dec 12, at noon.  
(in both paper and electronic form)

Apollo's head
The god Apollo on a gold coin of Syracuse
image courtesy of Edgar L.Owen,#3803

Directions:
  • electronic copy: e-mail me at victor.leuci@westminster-mo.edu); the name of your attached file should be:
  • F11-227-P6-Last Name, First Name  (e.g. F11-227-P6-Smith, Joan)
  • paper copy: bring to exam or drop by my office
  • length: 600-1000ish
  • sources:
  • ancient: see below
  • modern (if any): see below.
  • in-text citing reminders:
  • you must cite your sources of information (facts, theories, etc).
  • for print sources one must include specific page numbers
  • for the movie indicate what the movie is (no in-text citation needed then) and make sure your bibliography entry is correct
  • when using other texts--see previous papers
  • if Kebric or Pomeroy uses an ancient source, indicate this either in the main body of your text or at the end of the sentence, e.g. (Pindar, Kebric, 69).
  • works cited "page" reminders:
  • at beginning of paper not on a separate sheet
  • only include entries for what you used in your paper
  • make sure the bibliography is in the same font as your main text
  • make sure that you use hanging indents for the bibliography
  • writing intensive:
  • don't forget to turn in the draft copy with my or the Writing labs' comments on it for it to count towards your revised paper total (and don't forget to make the revisions!)
  • print this out and bring this to your writing lab conference and have the tutor sign here: ______________________________________
  • for more information, click here
  • Write on one of the topics below:
    1. Hector and Socrates seem to be motivated by love of their country. Discuss. Use only the movie and the Apology as evidence. (Note: make sure you don't write on the same people as you did on Exam 4--if you do exam 4).

    2. Achilles and Alexander the Great seem to be motivated by their desire for kleos, that their names will be remembered forever. Discuss. Use only the movie and Pomeroy's chapter 11. (Note: make sure you don't write on the same people as you did on Exam 4--if you do exam 4).

    3. 
    Compare and/or contrast two of the following: the Achilles of the movie, the Socrates of Plato's Apology, and Alexander the Great (source: Pomeroy's chapter 11). . (Note: make sure you don't write on the same people as you did on Exam 4--if you do exam 4).

    4. You work for Westminster College 100 years in the future when time travel is a reality (but it can't change the past). Two professors want to take a group of students to the times and places studied in a typical Greek Civilization course after the end of the Peloponnesian War and prior to the Roman conquest of the Greek world. The "summer" course (i.e. summer in the future, not necessarily in the past) will last approximately three weeks (some things in the future are still the same!). You work for the publications department and are entrusted with providing a brief write-up of what the trip would entail. Your write up need to both focus on the positive but also be honest about the challenges of visiting that time period. The professors want you to include

    something about one of the following topics:

    a. How the Athenian court system works (class notes),
    b.
    A day watching private court cases (2 court cases from Kebric's chapter 7--exclude one covered in Paper 5 if you did them for paper 5)
    c. a day watching a public court case (Plato's Apology--exclude if you covered this in Paper 5)

    something about one of the following topics

    a. visual arts the Hellenistic Age (Pomeroy, Ch 12)
    b.
    field trip to 2 battles that Alexander fought (Pomeroy Ch 11, include why they are important)
    c. daily life of women (use Theocritus' pdf, Document 12.2 in Pomeroy, 346-347, and Kebric, Chapter 7)
    d. Greek scientific advances (Kebric, 239-241, 243, 264; Pomeroy 353-355)