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MA Degrees | Ph.D. Program | Distance Learning Graduate Program | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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M.A. Reading ListsLatin Reading List
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| Plautus | Menaechmi |
| Terence | Adelphoe |
| Cicero | in Catilinam 1-4; pro Caelio; pro Archia; Somnium Scipionis |
| Caesar | Bellum Gallicum 1: 1-29; 5-6 |
| Catullus | Carmina 1-60, 65,67, 69-116 |
| Lucretius | 1 |
| Sallust | Catilina |
| Vergil | Aeneid 1-6; Georgics 4.315ff; Eclogue 4 |
| Horace | Carmina 1; 4: 2,7; Carmen Saeculare; Sermones 1: 1, 4, 5-6 |
| Livy | 21 |
| Ovid | Ars Amatoria 1; Amores 1: 1-5; Metamorphoses 1 |
| Tibullus | 1.10 |
| Propertius | 1: 1, 5, 7, 9, 20, 22; 2: 8-13, 26a, 27, 28b-c; 3: 1, 2, 10, 18, 21; 4: 7, 11 |
| Seneca | Epistulae 65, 88, 114 |
| Petronius | Cena Trimalchionis |
| Pliny the Younger | 3.16; 6.16; 20 |
| Martial | 5.37; 5.47; 10: 30, 62 |
| Juvenal | either 1 or 3 or 6 |
| Tacitus | Annales 1 |
| Apuleius | 1 |
In addition to the authors listed below, students are urged to read a history of Greece (e.g. Bury's History of Greece) and a good historical outline of Greek Literature (e.g. A. Lesky's A History of Greek Literature)
| Homer | Il. 1, 9, 24; Od. 1, 6, 9 |
| Homeric Hymns | 3 (in Apollinem) |
| Hesiod | Erga |
| Lyric | Cambell, Greek Lyric Poetry: Callinus, Tyrtaeus, Mimnermus, Solon, Archilochus, Sappho |
| Pindar | Ol. 1, 2; Pyth. 1; Nem. 6; Isthm. 7 |
| Theocritus | Carmina either 15, 16, or 17 |
| Aeschylus | Agamemnon |
| Sophocles | Antigone; Oedipus Tyrannus |
| Euripides | Alcestis; Bacchae |
| Aristophanes | Lysistrata or Frogs |
| Herodotus | 1; 6: 94-104 |
| Thucydides | 1: 2: 35-65 |
| Xenophon | Anabasis 1; Hellenica 1: 1, 1-37; 4, 1-23; 5, 10-17; 7, 1-35; 2: 1, 25-32; 2, 1-24 |
| Lysias | 1 |
| Demosthenes | Philippicae 1 |
| Plato | Apologia, Crito, Symposium |
| Lucian or Chariton or Longus |
(Students are encouraged to read some Imperial Age Greek |
| Aristotle | Poetics 1447-1452 |
The supervisory committee will administer a final oral and written comprehensive exam on the University of Florida campus at the completion of the course work. This examination will consist of: (1) an oral part: a one hour examination on the general field of Latin literature (2) a written part, consisting of one hour each on (a) Latin sight translation and grammar, (b) Roman history and civilization and, only if applicable, (c) the minor, or minors. As preparation for this examination, the supervisory committee will present the student with an individually designed reading list of secondary works in English after admission to the program.
For (1) the oral part, the one hour examination on the general field of Latin literature, read a standard history of Roman literature. The Department recommends:
H. J. Rose, A Handbook of Latin Literature
(if unavailable try Moses Hadas, A History of Latin Literature or
Michael Grant, Roman Literature)
For the written part (b) Roman history and civilization three books are required in the areas to be covered by this heading:
All the books listed here with the exception of Boak are listed in amazon.com. Boren is out of print but available through second hand dealers associated with amazon.com. Most should be available in a large public library or a decent college/university library. If you are uanble to locate one of the recommended books or suggested alternates, contact your supervisory committee for another choice. If you have selected a minor, your supervisory committee will make a special list for that area