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Classics, the study of ancient Greek and Roman civilization, has been an important part of intellectual life at the University of Toronto since its foundation as King's College in 1827. The Department of Classics at the U of T is one of the largest in North America with over 20 faculty and is internationally renowned for the excellence of its undergraduate and graduate programs. Our diverse faculty study all aspects of the Greek and Roman world: its literature, history, philosophy, art, archaeology and religion, from prehistory to the medieval period. Faculty are cross-appointed to the Philosophy department, the Centre for Medieval Studies, the Centre for Comparative Literature, the Women and Gender Studies Institute, and the Graduate Centre for the Study of Drama, and work with the Jackman Humanities Institute, the Royal Ontario Museum, and the Archaeology Centre. The department participates in five graduate collaborative programs: Ancient and Medieval Philosophy, Ancient History, Book History, Jewish Studies, Sexual Diversity Studies, and Women and Gender Studies. Our graduate alumni include Roger Bagnall, Anne Carson, Kathy Gaca, Mark Golden, and Brad Inwood. Located in the neoclassical Lillian Massey Building, the Department is home to the Woodbury Library, with extensive holdings in Greek and Latin, epigraphy and papyrology. The Department of Classics offers programs of unusual breadth and intellectual variety in one of the most culturally diverse cities in North America.

Departmental Events for November 2009

  • Friday, 6th November 2009 at 16:00:
    Stephen Halliwell (University of Saint Andrews)
    "Aristophanes' Frogs and the failure of poetics"

  • Friday & Saturday November 13-14th:
    Statius and Hellenistic Poetry, A Symposium

  • Monday, 23rd November 2009 at 17:00:
    Mark Lawall, CAC Lecturer (University of Manitoba)
    "'So there are Prices and Markets, so what?' Archaeological Efforts to advance Debates over Ancient Economies"

  • Friday, 27th November at 16:30:
    Cillian O'Hogan (University of Toronto)
    "'And what should I do in Imola?' Prudentius' intertextual journey in Peristephanon 9."

 

Lillian Massey Building +1-416-978-5513 (tel)
125 Queen's Park +1-416-978-7307 (fax)
Toronto, ON
Canada M5S 2C7
Chair: Alison Keith
Last modified 02.11.2009
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