Western Traditions-Renaissance to Modernity
Session
Regular Academic Session
Class Number
1197
Career
Undergraduate
Units
3 units
Grading
Graded Alpha
Topic
.
Description
This course (and its companion, HONR 101) opens perspectives on works that have shaped the self-understanding of the West. An interdisciplinary team of professors examines these works from a variety of disciplinary paradigms. Students will examine the recurring questions the works pose to each other and to our own culture: questions about the nature of human existence and destiny, and the characteristic problems and possibilities of humanity's struggle for justice, search for truth and hunger for beauty.

Outcomes: Studying a selection of major works from antiquity to the present, students learn how each text reflects its own period, how texts within each period present different views, and how ideas change over time; Written and visual expressions of these themes are examined in relation to the political and cultural background of each period: Ancient Greece and Rome, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, the Romantic Period and modernism.

These courses are structured as three hours of lecture and three hours of seminar each semester.
Enrollment Requirements
Restricted to students in the Honors Program.
Requirement Designation
Honors
Class Attributes
Artistic Knowledge and Experience
Class Notes
Restricted to students in the Honors Program.
Class Actions
Class Details
Instructor(s)
Dianne Rothleder, Kathryn Swanton, Christopher Whidden, Wenhan Zhang, Colin Holman, Jayme Stayer, Jaime Hovey
Meets
MoWeFr 12:35PM - 1:25PM
Dates
01/13/2025 - 04/26/2025
Room
Sullivan Center - Galvin Audit
Instruction Mode
In person
Campus
Lake Shore Campus
Location
Lake Shore Campus
Components
Lecture Required
Class Availability
Status
Open
Seats Taken
297
Seats Open
33
Class Capacity
330
Wait List Total
0
Wait List Capacity
0