English and Comparative Literature
Undergraduate Seminar
T 2:10-4PM
Surrounded by friends on the morning of his state-mandated suicide, Socrates invites them to join him in considering the proposition that philosophizing is learning how to die. In dialogues, essays, and letters from antiquity to early modernity, writers have returned to this proposition from Plato’s Phaedo to consider, in turn, what it means for living and dying well. This course will explore some of the most widely read of these works with an eye to the continuities and changes in these meanings and their impact on the literary forms that express them.
Link to Vergil
Note: only courses offered during the two previous semesters have active Vergil links.
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