Learning Latin and Greek from antiquity to the present

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Learning Latin and Greek from antiquity to the present

edited for the Department of Classics by Elizabeth P. Archibald, William Brockliss, Jonathan Gnoza

(Yale classical studies, v. 37)

Cambridge University Press, 2015

  • : hardback

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Bibliography: p. 209-231

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume provides a unique overview of the broad historical, geographical and social range of Latin and Greek as second languages. It elucidates the techniques of Latin and Greek instruction across time and place, and the contrasting socio-political circumstances that contributed to and resulted from this remarkably enduring field of study. Providing a counterweight to previous studies that have focused only on the experience of elite learners, the chapters explore dialogues between center and periphery, between pedagogical conservatism and societal change, between government and the governed. In addition, a number of chapters address the experience of female learners, who have often been excluded from or marginalized by earlier scholarship.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction: 'Learning me your language' Elizabeth Archibald, William Brockliss and Jonathan Gnoza
  • 2. Papyri and efforts by adults in Egyptian villages to write Greek Ann Hanson
  • 3. Teaching Latin to Greek speakers in antiquity Eleanor Dickey
  • 4. Servius' Greek lessons Felix Racine
  • 5. Pelasgian fountains: learning Greek in the early Middle Ages Michael Herren
  • 6. Out of the mouth of babes and Englishmen: the invention of the vernacular grammar in Anglo-Saxon England Jay Fisher
  • 7. First steps in Latin: the teaching of reading and writing in Renaissance Italy Robert Black
  • 8. The teaching of Latin to the native nobility in Mexico in the mid-1500s: contexts, methods, and results Andrew Laird
  • 9. Ut consecutivum under the Czars and under the Bolsheviks Victor Bers
  • 10. Latin for girls: the French debate Francoise Waquet
  • 11. Women's education and the Classics Fiona Cox
  • 12. 'Solitary perfection?' The past, present, and future of elitism in Latin education Kenneth J. Kitchell, Jr
  • 13. Exclusively for everyone - to what extent has the Cambridge Latin Course widened access to Latin? Bob Lister
  • 14. Epilogue Emily Greenwood.

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