Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Classical Dilemma
View through CrossRef
The Classical world continues to dwindle. The study of Greek has vanished altogether from very many schools and, in some places, even Latin hangs upon the uncertain future of administrative reorganization or the relaxation of faculty requirements. In the face of steady retreat, few can now afford the easy luxury of indifference and most admit to a rueful apprehension. What then is the future of the Classics? Unless the present drift is halted, the future must rest mainly with the Universities and it confronts them with a cruel dilemma. The glories of classical literature require the study of the classical languages, but this study, concentrated into three years, leaves scant time for literary glory or humane reflection. Yet literature can only survive if it is read and the study of a civilization can only be fruitful as long as it continues to provoke curious interest. Some will recoil from ‘popular’ or ‘general’ courses but no one should scoff at those who attempt them, for there perhaps lies our best hope that Classics will be more than the secret preserve of a devoted few. Such courses must inevitably walk a giddy tight-rope: if they include too much, they run the risk of drudgery, if they are content with too little, they may decline into that diarrhoea verborum so mercilessly pilloried by Wilamowitz. The state of equilibrium will be hard to attain, but it may be hoped that, with the continuing support of our contributors, Greece & Rome will be able to assist these new and crucial developments.
Title: Classical Dilemma
Description:
The Classical world continues to dwindle.
The study of Greek has vanished altogether from very many schools and, in some places, even Latin hangs upon the uncertain future of administrative reorganization or the relaxation of faculty requirements.
In the face of steady retreat, few can now afford the easy luxury of indifference and most admit to a rueful apprehension.
What then is the future of the Classics? Unless the present drift is halted, the future must rest mainly with the Universities and it confronts them with a cruel dilemma.
The glories of classical literature require the study of the classical languages, but this study, concentrated into three years, leaves scant time for literary glory or humane reflection.
Yet literature can only survive if it is read and the study of a civilization can only be fruitful as long as it continues to provoke curious interest.
Some will recoil from ‘popular’ or ‘general’ courses but no one should scoff at those who attempt them, for there perhaps lies our best hope that Classics will be more than the secret preserve of a devoted few.
Such courses must inevitably walk a giddy tight-rope: if they include too much, they run the risk of drudgery, if they are content with too little, they may decline into that diarrhoea verborum so mercilessly pilloried by Wilamowitz.
The state of equilibrium will be hard to attain, but it may be hoped that, with the continuing support of our contributors, Greece & Rome will be able to assist these new and crucial developments.
Related Results
Feminism versus femininity? Exploring feminist dilemmas through cooperative inquiry research
Feminism versus femininity? Exploring feminist dilemmas through cooperative inquiry research
This article analyses the findings from a cooperative inquiry study with seven feminist identified women based in the UK. It explores the tensions participants experienced in negot...
Caught in the Regime: Classical Music and the Individual in the Contemporary Novel
Caught in the Regime: Classical Music and the Individual in the Contemporary Novel
The twenty-first century has seen the identification and development of a new literary genre: the musico-literary novel, defined as a novel thematically concerned with music (Harli...
Art Music, Perfection and Power: Critical Encounters with Classical Music Culture in Contemporary Cinema
Art Music, Perfection and Power: Critical Encounters with Classical Music Culture in Contemporary Cinema
During the last three decades music scholars have provided a growing amount of critical accounts of what they contend is a fundamental conceptual support behind the performance of ...
Contemporary understanding of riots: Classical crowd psychology, ideology and the social identity approach
Contemporary understanding of riots: Classical crowd psychology, ideology and the social identity approach
This article explores the origins and ideology of classical crowd psychology, a body of theory reflected in contemporary popularised understandings such as of the 2011 English ‘rio...
Behold the raking geison: the new Acropolis Museum and its context-free archaeologies
Behold the raking geison: the new Acropolis Museum and its context-free archaeologies
In December 1834 Athens became the capital city of the newly founded Hellenic Kingdom. King Otto, the Bavarian prince whose political and cultural initiative shaped much of what mo...
The Classical Tradition in Contemporary Quebecois Theatre: Patterns of Ambivalence
The Classical Tradition in Contemporary Quebecois Theatre: Patterns of Ambivalence
In its oft-repeated attempt to achieve both "identity" and "liberation," the quebecois theatre of the sixties and seventies has turned aggressively, vociferously anti-classical. Al...
Analisis Teknik Permainan Gitar Klasik Karya Frederich Chopin: Nocturne In E-Flat Major Op.9 No.2
Analisis Teknik Permainan Gitar Klasik Karya Frederich Chopin: Nocturne In E-Flat Major Op.9 No.2
This study aims to determine how the song nocturne in e-flat major op 9 no 2 by Fredrich Chopin is technically expressed through the classical guitar playing by Francisco Tarrega. ...
Porcelain: another window on the neoclassical visual world
Porcelain: another window on the neoclassical visual world
AbstractThis article surveys the European, and especially German, porcelain industry’s output of classicizing figurines between about 1740 and 1900 in order to comprehend what visi...