JWST303 - Power and Peril

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Power and Peril
Term
2021C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
JWST
Section number only
401
Section ID
JWST303401
Course number integer
303
Meeting times
TR 03:30 PM-05:00 PM
Meeting location
JAFF B17
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Natalie B Dohrmann
Julia L Wilker
Description
We imagine ancient Greece and Rome as the cradles of democracy and republicanism, early Judea as a pious theocracy, but monarchy was the most common and prevalent form of government in antiquity (and the premodern world in general). In this class, we will take a special look at kinship among the Jews, Greeks, and Romans to assess and discuss similarities, differences, and mutual influences. In all these cultures, the king was a polarizing figure in reality and in conception. On the one hand, some revered the monarch as ideal leader, and monarchy provided the language with which to describe and even imagine the very gods. On the other, monarchs were widely reviled in both theory and practice, from the Greek tyrants to biblical Saul. The Emperor Augustus loudly denied his own affinity to the office of king, even as he ruled alone and was revered as a god. In other words, kings stood both for the ideal and the worst form of government. This class confronts the paradox of monarchical rule and will, through the lens of the king, explore ideas of god, government, human frailty, and utopianism.
Course number only
303
Cross listings
RELS303401, ANCH303401, CLST338401
Use local description
No