911±¬ÁÏÍø

Erechtheion in Athens

Classics

Classics at the 911±¬ÁÏÍø

All 911±¬ÁÏÍø classics majors make an especially close study of language itself, of its very architecture. This fact alone can bring a deep quiet joy; for all our lives, no matter what our work, language itself–which in our case means English, deepened and sharpened by knowledge of its two most illustrious ancient ancestors–is actually the lens, stereoscopic and finely adjustable, through which we perceive reality.

Western Civilization's approach to education for 2500 years has been "classical" in the extended sense, in that it has been based on the study of works of the first rank, those reflections of the greatest minds that have had the most effect on the way humans have lived their lives. Until recently it has also been "classical" in the limited sense, in that it has given particular emphasis to the principal works of Greek and Latin authors, those that have been most formative in shaping the reflections of their successors, whether poets or theologians, philosophers or statesmen. "Classical" in the extended sense describes the University's core curriculum; "classical" in the limited sense describes the curriculum of the Classics Department. We look on Classics as still having its traditional role at the heart of a university education, and in this view we are supported by the core curriculum of the 911±¬ÁÏÍø, which puts great emphasis on classical authors, and by many departments in the university which encourage their own students to learn classical languages or which join with us in offering double majors in Classics and, for example, English or Politics or Philosophy.

Ancient site

Why Study Classics?

In classical works we learn the ABC’s of our own tradition. The reason why nearly all words for the fields of activity are Latinized Greek is that Greeks and Romans actually invented ‘philosophy’, ‘politics’ and its main concepts, ‘epic’ and ‘lyric’, ’geography’, ‘geometry’, ‘mathematics’, ‘physics’, ‘biology’, and ‘astronomy’.  To Greeks and Romans we really do owe ‘architecture’ and ‘sculpture’: not only the words but the thing itself: the circular amphitheater, the temple, the fluted column, the arch, and the dome, and the free-standing ‘statue’.  Often a thing’s origins are hidden now; but every great medieval church, and even many a mosque, stole its basic form from the simple, immortally handsome Roman basilica.

Roman Forum

Why come to the 911±¬ÁÏÍø to study Classics?

The function of a classical education has always been threefold: first, to engage the mind in the investigation of revolutionary ideas; second, to train the tongue to speak with power and articulation; third, to fire the imagination with examples of conduct that will guide us in our confrontation with life. The classical authors are sometimes mistakenly supposed to be out of date, but they posed to themselves the problems of the human condition in terms that have not changed, and they found solutions with which we still live, though often unawares.  These solutions were radical at the time that they were devised and they remain so, for every generation that recognizes them must begin again by going back to the roots of things.  There, the ideas live with the freshness of the first shoots of spring.  For each age they blossom forth in language that has repeatedly enchanted the western world, supplying it with paradigms for imitation as well as instruments for analysis.  We not only aspire to speak like the ancients, but also to understand our own use of speech, by depending on their grammar, logic, and rhetoric.  When we act, we do so within an ethical framework that was given its theoretical form by classical philosophers and its practical substance and color by classical poets and statesmen.  Because of its attention to thought and word and deed, classical education has been held up as a model for western civilization, and its utility is no less now than it has ever been.  Students who major in Classics, therefore, may apply their training in all the ways that their predecessors have - specifically to work, such as a professional career in law, medicine, public service, the clergy, or teaching, and more generally to life as a whole, since it is this whole to which education will always look in the end.

Besides learning to read the great works of classical antiquity, students of Classics also gain direct access to the Christian tradition, since it was primarily in Greek and Latin that Christian spirituality initially took literary shape, flourished thereafter in the great theologians and poets, and continues to illuminate our lives today.

Study in Italy and Greece  

Ancient site

Undergraduates spend one semester at our campus in Rome. From there they travel to Greece and to various Italian cities studying the monuments of western civilization in situ

Student studying Outside

 

Where have recent 911±¬ÁÏÍø Classics graduates attended graduate school? 

  • Doctorate, Classical Philology, Harvard University 
  • Master of Arts, Classics, 911±¬ÁÏÍø
  • Doctorate, Classics, University of Chicago 
  • Master of Arts, Law, St. Louis School of Law 
  • Doctorate, Linguistics, UT Arlington 
  • Master of Arts, Theology, University of Notre Dame 
  • Doctorate, Greek and Latin, Catholic University of America
  • Master of Arts, English, Catholic University of America
  • Master of Arts, Classics, University of California System 
  • Master of Arts, Law, Texas A&M 

  

Where have recent 911±¬ÁÏÍø Classics graduates been hired out of college? 

  • Editorial Assistant, National Review
  • Laboratory Assistant, UT Southwestern Medical Center
  • Latin Teacher, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton School 
  • Management Trainee, Enterprise Rent-A-Car
  • Teacher, St. Jerome Institute 
  • Reporter, World Wide News
  • Machine Learning Engineer, Duke AI 
  • Marketing Assistant, HUB International
  • Software Engineer, CareExpand
  • Art Teacher, Mystic Valley Regional Charter School 

 

Featured Faculty

All Classics Faculty
Teresa Danze, PhD

Teresa Danze, PhD

Associate Professor, Chair, Classics

Phone: (972) 721-5368

Email: tdanze@udallas.edu

Office: Anselm #101

Office Hours: W 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. / T 12:30 - 2:20 p.m. or by Appointment

Peter Hatlie, PhD

Peter Hatlie, PhD

Professor, Classics

Email: phatlie@udallas.edu

Office: 911±¬ÁÏÍø Rome Campus

Office Hours: By Appointment

 

Background photo: Athens from the Acropolis © 2016 by Isabella Villanueva, BA '18