2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog
Classics
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338 Academic Center, Ellicott Complex
North Campus
Buffalo, NY 14261-0026
716-645-0466
arts-sciences.buffalo.edu/classics.html
Bradley Ault, Ph.D.
Chair
John Dugan, Ph.D.
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Classics Overview
Classics is an intensely interdisciplinary field of study comprising the culture, history, languages and material remains of ancient Greek and Roman civilizations. The department of Classics offers courses on the archaeology, art, culture, history, and literature of ancient Greece and Rome, and language classes in Latin and ancient Greek. Majors complete a capstone class that draws upon all of the conceptual and analytical skills that they acquired while a major.
Students of classics are students of:
Archaeology
By examining the objects, architecture and other physical remnants of an ancient civilization, students begin to form a tangible connection with the people whose lives served to advance modern medicine, technology, systems of government, and agricultural and military practices.
Art
Thousands of antiquities, including sculpture, pottery and reliefs, have survived to the present day, offering 21st century scholars and artists the opportunity to study not only the sophisticated techniques, but also the storytelling power of these lasting links to ancient cultures.
Linguistics
Classical Greek and Latin formed the foundation of the modern Romance languages. As some of the oldest documented human languages and writing systems, to study Latin and Greek is to study the early human mind and thought process, as well as the complex symbiosis between oral and textual communication.
Literature
From mythology to epic poetry to drama, the literature of classical civilizations engages with the most fundamental human emotions and concerns. Students encounter pivotal works like Vergil’s Aeneid, Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, Plato’s Symposium and Sophocles’ Antigone, while researching the contemporary circumstances that led to their production.
Philosophy
Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Marcus Aurelius - these names are synonymous with ancient philosophy. Spurring an intellectual revolution, they are among the many significant figures who, by creating and defining rational thought, contributed to the core understanding of mathematics, anatomy, astronomy and more.
Academic Advising
Students obtain academic advice and guidance from the academic advisors in the College of Arts and Sciences Student Advisement & Services office (275 Park Hall) and from faculty in their program of study. The CAS Student Advisement and Services Office assists undergraduate students in the College of Arts and Sciences to plan their academic trajectory, develop goals and successfully complete their college careers.
Academic Advising Contact Information
College of Arts & Sciences Student Advisement & Services
275 Park Hall, North Campus
North Campus, Buffalo, NY 14260-4140
Phone: 716-645-6883
Email: cas-advisor@buffalo.edu
ProgramsMajorsCombinedMinors
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