12/24/2023 0 Comments 35 31 11 51 polybius square![]() ![]() ![]() Hippocrates, On the Sacred Disease (20).Hellenistic Epigram: Selections in Sens from, among others, Asclepiades, Callimachus, Theocritus (31).Flavius Josephus**, Judean War 4 (99), Life (70).Dio Chrysostom**, 7 Euboicus (18), 12 Olympicus (26), 36 Borysthenicus (17).Demosthenes**, 9 Third Philippic (19), 18 De Corona (97), 21 Against Meidias (43), 59 Apollodorus: Against Neaera (37).1 ( In Telchinas), 2 ( Somnium), 43 ( De Siciliae Urbibus), 54-60b ( Victoria Berenices), 67-75 ( Acontius et Cydippa), 110 ( Coma Berenices) Harder (17) Hymn to Athena (6) Aristophanes, Acharnians (56) **, Clouds (81) *, Birds (71), Lysistrata (58) **, Thesmophoriazusae (49), Frogs (61).Archaic Lyric Poetry: Selections in Budelmann from Alcman, Alcaeus, Sappho, Stesichorus, Ibycus, Anacreon, Simonides, Timotheus, popular/drinking songs (30).Archaic Iambus and Elegy: Selections in Allan from Archilochus, Hipponax, Semonides, Callinus, Tyrtaeus, Mimnermus, Solon, Theognis, Simonides (30).Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 3 (56), 4 (71).Aeschines, 3 Against Timarchus (95) **.Achilles Tatius, Leucippe and Clitophon 1-2 (35).Aeschylus, Persians (43) **, Agamemnon (60), Choephori (41), Eumenides (38).Greek Reading List (last updated November 2022) Commentaries have also been selected with the idea that students pick authors/works/genres from the list with which they are perhaps less familiar, so introductory commentaries, most notably ‘Green & Yellows’ and ‘Aris & Phillips’, have been included (both readily available, and the latter now largely in open access). ![]() Commentaries are all hyper-linked (to the publisher’s page, an online edition, Google Books or Worldcat) they have been selected with a view to reputation, ready availability and user-friendliness.For verse, 1 page = 25 lines for prose, pages of OCT or another edition (sometimes Teubner or Loeb) have been counted, so the figures are not always entirely comparable.The lists offer authors, titles, number of pages (in brackets) and one or occasionally more suggested commentaries.The coordinate can also provide the student with a testimonium. The OIKOS coordinators have to register these details for the OIKOS annual report. OIKOS has to keep track of the activities students are following as part of the OIKOS educational program, so we kindly request examiners or students to inform us for how many ECTS the student created a reading list. It is possible to compose an OIKOS reading list for 1 to 10 ECTS, of which a maximum of 5 ECTS may count for the 10 ECTS of OIKOS ECTS that students need to obtain within their curriculum. Together you can agree on your personal reading list, taking into account the general guidelines for the OIKOS reading list. If a student wishes to focus on epigraphic or papyrological texts or on philosophical texts and fragments, please contact the staff member you would like to supervise and assess you. Texts marked with an asterisk (*) are of particular interest for philosophy students and those marked with two asterisks (**) are of particular interest for students of ancient history. The lengths of the texts are expressed in OCT pages, added between brackets after each text. The expected reading speed is 1 page Oxford Classical Text (OCT) per hour or 15 pages of secondary literature per hour (1 EC = 28 hours). With consent of their tutor in their local graduate school, ReMA students can compose their own reading list - based on the one below - to add to their OIKOS curriculum. If, for the time being, it turns out to be impossible to read all texts in Greek or Latin, they should at least be read in translation. Students might have read several of the texts in courses already, but presumably not all of them. This list is based on the Greek and Latin reading lists of Princeton University, where all students are expected to have read these texts before starting their PhD. The OIKOS educational board has composed a list of Classical core texts of which ReMA students and PhD students should try to read as much as possible. OIKOS reading list (varying number of ECs) ![]()
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